Southeastern Massachusetts University - Scrimshaw Yearbook (North Dartmouth, MA)
- Class of 1977
Page 1 of 216
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 216 of the 1977 volume:
“
Yrvj 'F . 1 H J I A 4' 'Q l. tv 1, 'x-lk: , . 5 4 K I IYQNXJ. V l ,,1' ' u N A N r NQQJEVA ' A .mtv A 1 1 xo, '- A J sd. gr 'A X v J r 7, 1 V Nj. 5 W 0' 1 ' Q, ' lv A-.v 1 I .... 41 Q.- rf V' I 1 ' X I A I p x 1 1 M 1 V - . bf, ,- , 4 ,,v. , , v Q ., Q ta QQ? -459 Ti A N N1 X N959 lvwpb 7 Ch ..2F'3 ? Q My 'is xml. ul ' - -- gifs: 2 . --'ln O 1 .v'9' 'b. iq E E ara PHOTO BY ALICE TRIMIEW For Phyllis and Nina WHEN When they put you bloody and immaculate on your mother's diaphanous stomach you kneaded your shadow love stared milk and your mother cooed CZWG. There will be no poetry when there is no sea inside the seashells when the seashells are empty ears. M, . Everett Hoagland and his son Kamal Until then let us celebrate the surf the deep blued whale 's songs in our ears and hear everything silhouetted by silence like your cry for beamed moon-juice in this dark room tonight. As we listen to a woman 's, Whales and Nightingales. 4' a An album by Judy Collins TIO SMEJVSEU Hoagland was born in 1942. He is a native ol Pliiladelphia and currently .in .is-s.i-.rat-. ini:---sc: I' i - ,- - 15 POGUY and short fiction have appeared in numerous periodic-,its and ,,,,ili..il..p,,,. ,,,,p,,1,,,,. ir, H , , p ,. 932lHf2llTlJ, New Black Voices flhentorl, Heartblowllllinoisl. Black World x1L.lgLlllllL'H. lite .'Xll1L'lli..tli I'-it-lti'.-ul-'r-'. avF5lQ:dgf:lg1gin?.Ll?sWEE3g1g lggitrly Ehglllayers 'The Massachusetts Review llc has been llre rc.igiit-nt. ot '.,iii-inf for his Oet. l , U1 gc area H, .OO fellowship front the Massachusetts Arts and llttttiatitltes 1 .,r,,,,1,,r,.,,, P tc series entit ed Sonic Vision 119753, and also the Ciwendolyn Brooks Award tor 1'-or-try Pf0feS?Qf H02l81311d 1188 Corltmued to writelas well as inspire a great many of his students to write poetry ll his year. under the spiritual leadership and professional guidance of Professor Hoagland. a group of students created thc tirst llnrd vtiiild writing ensemble called the North Star Nova. The groups main objective is to bring cultural at-tarciit-ss lu the surrounding community fconsistent with SMU's commitment to the eonimunityl. via dramatic presentations, pot-tis readings, dancing, and singing. The North Star Nova is made up of seven students and one statt tneniltct l rica lwiti.: Joanne Diamond, Melvin Richards, Stephanie Gibson, Elizabeth Watkins. Wanda Castro. Morris Harris. and Mary Jaclsoii It has been this type of dedication and the great respect and admiration which both students and liellovt faculty hasc tor him, that we have dedicated this year's Scrimshaw to the man, Everett Hoagland. S: As a Black man, professor, and writer, you are obviously involved--that is, your writing is a form of involvement-but how do you see yourself in relation to the Black community, both the SMU academic community and beyond? H: I don't differentiate between the academic Black community and the urban Black community. My writing carries international significance. When I went to Jamaica I was surprised at how many people had read my works, which have appeared in Black World , Players , Third World and other books and magazines. Manchupa Suitew, and Rite of the Sister are two local pieces which deal with a theme that has international conotations. I try to jump up and down about Sambo's. S: Your 'jumping up and down about Sambo's has affected this community to a large extent, especially your poems Batuki , and Manchupa Suite . Why have they been so controversial? What was your intent? H The poems really put people in a defensive posture. They didnit do what I had hoped they'd do. That is provide a forum for discussion and analysis and criticisms on some long standing misconceptions, identity crises which in fact are, in many cases, self-perpetuated. S: To change the subject for a moment, I'd like to know your feeling on the fact that we've been losing Black scholars at SM U5 some due to monetary reasons. What do you think the future at SMU will hold for the Black community? H: I lament the loss and miss the person of Luis Wilson who was a Godsend, as far as I'm concerned. He was a scholarly young man who was an Africanist and who was faciled a lot of the things that l've been learning about. His background in African history supplemented my interests and developing background in ,African literature. I understand why he left and it may be one of the reasons why I may have to leave, that is because I have responsibilities, not only a son, I have basic fundamental ones like dental work and an automobile. llm an associate professor, I've been promoted and given tenure in three years which should indicate that my job has been more than satisfactory, but I'm still at the level at which I was first hired despit the fact that I was given the impression I was going to get a raise. and my situation is analogous to the situation of over 25 people. lt seems unfair when you have put in as much time and invested as much money in education as, say. someone who is a lawyer or a doctor or a professor at a richer school. Yculve got to move. youlve got a right to move. Teaching at SMU. believe it or not is a hung. it is not your life. and it is your lite that you are responsible to. The job Situation for Junior professors at SML' does not allow one to fulfill one's responsibiliti es to one's life. especially if one is interested in travelling. That is one of the reasons that SMU is not able to attract interesting Black scholars The State Legislature has no committment to a State University. financially. lt's a lip service committment. S: What is the situation of nzost post-secondary schools 2 H: The Junior High School shitts the blame for a lack of learning to thc elementary school. the High School to the Junior High. and the Colleges to the High Schools. One of the things we are not willing to talk about is the home. As far as l'm concerned the home is probably the I'ltOsl important thing outside of college. I was raised in a fatnily headed by a posttnan. a family in which the mother did not work and l think a lot of people are just lazy with their kids and are not doing the things that they should bt doing. Continued on page 6 215 - - L , , - . 1- I f-il5'1?:'f. 'F 71- -, - N .- -'. ww - if: 1 V M N .Ni -ff -1-,sy-,AM 1. -,ag I - 4 --W' . f- 1 -v w' iran- f ,A X -- pq' . ,f-.fx - ,V ' 1 . 9- Y' -- . H 1 WH W - -Q!-'5 ' rf - v : - xx- 'fl 1 'f ' ' .1911 jr f' ' . ..ff ,, - ,,1:.fir. -- , H ' 2 1 if ., wi- . -. .L 1 '- x ,L Q ' X' f 'M -. ' . 'J' - -'- U W is? ' - . fa,-fx - H ,. K- A f v - ,- '-Q ' 14 ig, ' 1 - . . 'Q 4- - fmiff-1 v' Y 142 -5- W. JL , gn . ' , 11- - 4- --frm- V 1335- 'gm I I FIA, 57-4 , QQ , , -5 VM- N , .- W. ' 5,7 X--21,1 - -EFI-K 'fe-2, 'Y 5-af' S+ f' ,,-1 L' -. 3 ,. '-. if? W 12 - 5'- 3,51-K' 1 ,Wg-N A.,-:-. - ' Ayn -- ,f , V- 7 mmm -,.. . Fwsi - .awww w-, -'?,1,'4,- 11 K 1 - ....f,-,- -v. 49 JH 4 -25555 ' - '11, ' f5',.4 J, F - fi, 3 .2 ,cTd,,- 52.31, -,,1?' f, ., -,:5,+ff'- -aiu ggi 55:---' :A ,Sf N :V .f g f 4-515 Q ,Y A ,- gj, -jijfz -1-1: 1 J -qw .:--.3 - ' - Y V -Vt, 4. J .- ' ' ii- Zi ff' '- ,Q 1 -gui.: M rf g',.ih:'-',,-1 ,, Q1 43, A ,gp 'f r , ' 1 -Q7-'-,Q ' 1 . , - .. - M, g QV-5:9 L:Fig--SS.2?72..3Q5QQ5555 -,Lag' 'inrzi-Vff GQ .- 'fkiir E'-4,0 4 - f'7' -' ' 1 ff 4: 5533 l -f favs - - N X gy! 1: - ' . 4 A nil 42. 5- ', j, 5' . , jr ' 45' , .. f f --qrfxznm.- -,- -- -H H , , -gf. ' 'Q wig-gykl - ' 1 ,-: 1 A 'fu -. - 1 5,1-.--, ,L , N 1 X . .' - - ,. rig: -wa 3: -T-'A , X H f ' ' - in -. ,-,. ,-- W an ., . ,M A , . . , 1. :,---fg,,1i - , - 1 - 1 'fv H - . ' f 4 - ' - A - . 5' :M-E I X .,--, N Q' b A K -A-T--ty,-,Av Vx., ,- V,--a kk -A ', 'q-L,.3fT- '- , -ff' ,ff 5 My 1, . 12 'Nw iii 'EHR -1 N M 4. W1,-'ww v-1'--' H.-WM 'J-'rflw 1 ' ,SJ-.5555 ., ?'IQLlfS1'-R 72-'FQ '- . - 'N' 'W' , 44'Ji Q' Qn3f'T'f 'cf'-',4-,g,7-3aQ5vf'Q'R334 -3f?',f51x+-'T '.- 1 1-3:7 - , QW 9,Q-wwf .01-ff ,---. ,. K ,.-A Af --.IW---. ,,, - -- W - ,,-- .' -V -.6559 554. -f' ' A -4 J-V77-' ' ' - A , ., 12- . ,i--jT3j'F-EQWQQJF.-+-Q ' A ' Q W, kb 'gy V 1 L, ,.T,gc,f,-311 ny, ' FW , -- --i'ffl99'- JU .. ,, if I W ' ' ',,+--- -Q15 ff .- UJ 1 rm ' -' -..iv-a?W'--,'- 1, 1 r f , ' ,V 'N --, ,-. V-f w ,.'-am ' ' X',1 fgr lCQ-z ':' , ' Q '. . pi- mire 1+-2' W , ,Q-.xx V Mfg ii- 4 47-Qggskjlfgfvg'!hf.:'Q!41:g,, - Y I -I ff.,-5-L5q 1,zSL ig.-5,35 .g,g, 2fA-9 . ,. 23,1522 at-'1'5I? f?q ' Nia .n :A ' I -vig 'im' 4... X I ! A I I I 5 i i 1: '. W, ,X,,,. - , k1n'3pI,'Hn Lulu WJ + 1E .EW.2Y Sv 'iilmii M WM ' W ' xl. N ul ' 1-33574 wt WWW v W 413 - . Wi L ' , U Wig QI :El ik, M3 W wi 1 'Q il 1 ' ll T- . il- i imfii fiivv' ' nw-f 'lvnfl fl, F7 2 f' P AMBERGRIS I assist the fluke-tailed, white Cadillac Overheated. Spouting steam, parked at the evil side of the road taken but it 's got a smooth transmission Listen to... the mechanical melody, a whale 's song modulated. The desperate sonar of an endangered species. The unseen stream of sperm whale oil transmits evil automatically. The whale 's sonic vision stares loudly at my soul. My unblinking ear hears blues. The desperate sonar of an endangered species floats up like ambergris, the mechanics of modulation. Note: Until recently, the oil derived from sperm whales was used, in this country, in automatic transmission fluid. Copyright: Everett Hoagland I 9 75 S: How do you see yourself as an educator in trying to overcome those problems? Or is it too big a task for you to deal with? H: Well there is a certain amount of frustration when you're teaching a specialty and you can't elaborate on your speciality because you have to so much mechanical work with the students. You get critiques and you're involved in doing what you do with E-lOl students. It not only slows you down, it also gives you the impression that the studenths ability to deal with abstract skills for putting the stuff down on paper are not there. So the in the material may be high I ' ability to translate and .tfwiffling the material or a opinion with the are to a type written page, this not there. And so I with the primary and fundamental business of being able to write what you think. I,m finding that Ilm getting Juniors and Seniors who are incapable of that. I know that the English department is trying to do everything that it possibly can to remedy that situation, but the department is unable to rectify a less than ideal High School, Junior High School, and elementary and home situation. S: Do you consider college to the key to success for Black folk? H: The so-called 'key to successl, feducationl is not necessarily that key. Once you get there they switch the lock on it. You may have a key in your hand, but they really don't want you in the system in a meaningful way. My whole generation, my parents existed so that we could live with education as an aid, and so that we live so that our children can flourish, because Black people are getting tired of just surviving. Survival is a habit that we have gotten together very well. We need to stop thinking about it-a fungus 'can survive- we need to start thinking about living and flourishing. An education at the College level is not necessarily a way to do that. In a system that doesnlt regard you as having any meaningful humanity...you're being educated for what...to what-... It's something to think aboutf' S: What do you think is a way out? Do you have any notions as to what the future holds? H: No way out. We don't always have to talk about flight of escape. A way of changing it is to provide alternatives and that has to be done at the graduatels level. Beginning in the mid-sixties, black people who had educational backgrounds and high interests in the welfare of their children, have, in large cities, established alternatives to institutionalized education as it's whipped on kids by public sectors in this country. This makes for degrees of success, it may not prepare you for success in the 'system' but the system dehumanizes Black people...In some cases they say we do not exist. A metaphor which Ralph Ellison chose, The Invisible Man is very, very appropriate, even today...I,m part of it because a University Professor is a servant of the system, and anyone that tells you he is not, is a liar. When we cease to be a servant of the system, they will fire you. You are working for the State, the Commonwealth and you adhere to the laws of Massachusetts and to the laws of the United States which are designed to support and strengthen' the system...and you walk fine lines, so what do you do? You live with yourself and you face yourself in the mirror as you shave, and with a certain amount of pride you say to yourself, 'I got to do some other thingsf tI've got to tell people who are important to me about themselves, about their backgrounds, about their present beauty, and about their beautiful potential., So you organize a Third World writing group. So you teach and develop an African and West Indian Literature courseg You organize and develop a Blackamerican Lit. course. You ,deal with the aesthetics that are alternatives aesthetics that are rooted in folk mores, in folk forms of expression. among people that did not come out of the tradition, historically of the sonnet and the ode, etc... that came out of the tradition of Bop , of 'tMama of the tradition of i'Blues'l .. of string bandsf, S: Thinking in terms of W.E.B. DuBois' phrase The problem of the twentieth century is the problem of the color line. would you venture to discuss what you feel shall be the problem of the twenty-first? H: 5 The problem of the twenty first century is going to be the'survival of our species. I came to college as a Zoology major, I have an interest in life and all its forms. I- like to think of myself as a life-affirming poet, a very desperate situation these days, as Black people are on the endangered species list, but so is all mankind. And in a Laughing-to-keep-from-crying way I asked Stokely Carmichael 'what does the dialectic havetfor this 'Hawk'?,' fthe Hawk is thelname black people give to the winter wind, the coldb, because an Ice Age is coming. And uthe manw is building a space shuttle so that he can get off the planet, because he has nothing for the Hawk. There is nothing that technocracy has to stop this Ice Age...Michael Harper talks about cosmic payback' which has to do with natural pollution and the cosmic violation--the willful perversion of natural process--and the eoiniiig lie age seems to reinforce those suggestions about that...Stokely asked me how I knew that an lee Age was coming about and I said 'You know our people are very adaptive and very intuitive...I knew that an Ice Age was coming the first time l saw Blgglx P90916 Skiillgls A Black person has to be damaged, it seems to me. to play in the snow. I don't care what it's called. it's playing in the snow. I think we adapt too well...One of our problems is that we have adapted to hell itself, hell being history of abuse...to adapt to hell you have to become hellish . As such it affects your perspective about other people. And it affects your love relationships, your values, your sense, and your perception of your history...The fact is that there is nothing so existential as the Nigger and there is no term as romantic as the term Negro, as the Negro in the western world. Romantic in any sense of that term...and a lot of us mindlessly tend to perpetuate that romance, live up to the adjective. Can you imagine, most people are proper nouns, we started off by being called an adjective, black. But we, having that dropped on us, as Blaelcf people often do, have taken that ankd created a proper noun out of it. And have created a proper noun out of blackness: a state of mind, not something that helps to modify an object... S: You had mentioned earlier that psycholinguistics is a fundamental concern of Blagk poets and the concept of Nommo, the creative and procreative power of the word. What does it all mean? H: Psycholinguistics is very important. Any poet...must deal in titJ...It,s the psychological ramifications that go along with the way a person says something or describes something. Or the value...judgements that go with a certain way of phrasing things.Whe.n a Black person uses the term denigrate, a 'Blagkperson is doing damage to the concept of blackness as a positive state of being, and he needs to be aware of that. Because youlre speaking in forked tongue, you're saying that Black is beautiful, then you're saying that Black is negative... If the words carry basic, fundamental humanl messages. they're gonna i - , .i....., !.' ii' its .ilklixlgg s tty- tleetl lit t:.iiis,-xiii I lllt' t'.ll.'c' .i i..tf.'L' lift ,g ii, still ll utltft '... Lilltl li igiiyyg, lacl that Int in i uw- ti it I' A '- i x ki . lsr ' . Llel ol- liberation. .is 'stun ,,,4 I ll.,,I,,, says. ls to destroy that rage Iziei are certain arelietypes that lSl.nl. people have..their lllsltily list-li lx urfhclylllll- Rootsl' brings that 0ut...the arehelype is the tourney ...among other things. journey .intl CUSC. are archetypes associated with the Black experience. But also dinsn. the blues woke me up this morning . There's always that shape ul hopefulness. S: Do you think there will come a time when these arc-lzetypes will jade away, say, in the twct1t,1'-ji'rsr ewitzujr ' H: Yes. because there may not be the eyes here to read them. l'd like to read two poems that deal with this: Toomer said Man's stark alternatives are these: transcendence or 'extinctionfl Jacques Cousteau subsequently, has echoed Toomerk worryings about manls propensity tt. want his self-destruction Unless we reverse our tendencies, all oceans will be dead seas in thirty to fifty years. So what does that mean? Well...the ocean produces at least ninth-tenths of the world's oxygen and what a dead sea is is a sea that supports no life. Welre running out of fresh water...the Army Corp. of Engineers is giving out water in half-gallon containers...and that is a prophesy of things. to come in the national level...people are going to be fighting over food and water. literally in the streets...and this is the country that is supposed to be the metaphor for plentitude...so. we in our little corner. getting our little degrees. teaching our little classes can suggest to ourselves that all is well because we are cushioned by the boundaries ol' the University. that cushions us from reality. But more and more starkly the alternatives that Toomer talked about. transcendenee or extinction. are becoming increasingly apparent . yellow urgemji' PULES Ihr' lurri tl hKUAl l15 'lltltlltll lltt ' urrnmtlttil nrtlioiit roofs gllftx Is lfllllhtltl Wllll tullltw it irc' .Xl'fL'tllll.N Crtsttttc' llffltllrml Clllxillllit' liolaliori' DU-fjrtclils ,Xt'I1lll1t'l seeritlvss silerzu' to the .sun The trunipel 's l'oli's Lc'al'c'.x' of copper itisulatecl l7I'UllllIt'N of hum tclepliotics and light hnllvs blossom in an imagistic' bloom wt' 611111101 .s't't1st' the public .vtztiliol Costttll' Vifllallotl Chvttzlt' l'1'oli1l1'fft1 r fullflhllljllll l:i't'retr llouglutttl 5-Mn A. , -'fa f' 1 ,l wx 'Hz qw , 1 ...QA-W 1, . - f nf . 4 , . -qi mmf 'Qui 1-P ,.f1'i'f'f, M z . , ,L , 1, KK' 5 'SI Ps N. W, ,i P me 'J 1 Y- fl -I - :ix .,.1 L .' 11:55 . ,A qv'--,.. 1 -r 7 . .1 ' M... 1 .n ' ' Q, ,Wu I '- 'J ' 3:,,. fun!! Q: . f M ai ,, Y A ' ' Pit, 1 ,.f 'i' i'N Ai.:9,1'f lk .., ' ' ' wr, , 5 1.. x 'l , 4 Q .L . ' Q -, J V .4 Q 7. V , , '- A - . X-1 ii, Y ' - , Q . ' W4 Q. u 1 .1 , V Q..'yf.:, -L . , 1 V ai 31.4 flrl if' -' 'A , '1 4' . 3 . A V j ,Lv f ,:, ' , , 3 - -fl' vi ,S N1 -Q x .5 K A' ,gy ,fy-1, 1.4 ' Q 3, 1 ' M Y rg. , 1 1 uk y . W. . 5, 5 . .2 '5 1 -' 4 - 1 . . A ' ' Ls , . t 'f I W' I f. H .fn ' . Q . ' Nh if ,pk f w ,4 X .wwilva ,V F f 4 , 1' W, f' 1 J. , ' J if 1 M if? .14 ,, -' A. ,V V, , ,w X-MPM, .ww uw, X ' X . 'V My '5 :Y wfvH,,g, :LQ mv. 'bf ffl' 'iw ' f 1.5 H L 'P ffl 'f 'K if ' ' i ,WHL . ' k g 'TA'-7' A-all - 1 Q-M.--If .45-um - ff-1-4 V LW...f1wvfEg, ' ' A ' ..- ff' V 1 fb , + - J f' .X 5 1 uf' Q,'5,gL 4' I , 4 vi , Q 'L 'lx' lhbii , W, ' 'a ?- X. fifii . 'V , ' Q.. Q - fa: A QQ... hx, . f wma, i ,nl f ' ' -iffsgpi' -. ,awk-f 'N -' ' . -- ,,, - E , flrpfw -3. -, ' f-.-, o 1' - gf ' - ' ' A ' ' '?fT1-1?f- 'I 1 E X J 9 1 A l 5 I I J' -4, ..4,,,, L ,V 3' 43? , , 4. , .-rw .4 Q 1 , ,pf- ' , ' . Q. .S , . . 1 . ,.-1.. ,. ' ,'r:4'f5i5' L QSQ Q '-.V+ . -fzffw L 5.3 ' r, Vx .,x, . P . .. , f . . fi5W'?7' ' ' .1 'Sf' f' H ' ' -- ' Aji,:'n'fg'8z' , ,L . Z. - , N -1? Y., Ii 1 jr'5 --2- -:',.,1 V514 JQI. . .lffufii - . W ffslizaywi? '. .' 35. 12 .Q-f:f5r4:i?'6'e-g 'f ' LEA - tg- ' M, Y H i: f3V5?' E. . ' 511-'il' - 1 -if QS' ' k. ,mf W 'Q . ,Y p Tx: 2 .. -up , 2,51 . - , ' ,iRNi.ff' -54 9.1, . 7 -T 11554135 -, ' -'f..j,1. f 1 -- ' gg. , ,wh V-feQ1L:g:,ci3!:u-N 'K ' .. - xi-'qggg .', - M , ., xzx- -.w. x-... . Af' -P41 ,,x. -K 1-.--. 4 , . Lf:.m::.,7rf:wMeezs 1 .u,.r3,-m-Q.x,.- ,ww .. y A 4' effsf ab . :-px 135.-, -iw -'laik -'rf' 1 , Y Q ik-A .1-E wx cf- V ,T -.Fi if ' Qkfra vr , 'ffw sfg .R , . V.. .... V 5k I. .s ,Q 5. , My ini. : iEL ' ff V M.. 1- 1' . .73 ' f 15 K iw ' I 4' VN,-9. ff, 5 9 .vp 1 MJT., B- F T' 1 ' l L xi 1 . y 1 Q 1 ,QL 3 l , ,BQ - V 1 rm ' . , O Q six , - '.L, . xx I 9 ' gg:-fx' ewbvzv ,.-1 45:19 'f 'g'irl .'2fT1-5 s 1,1 'Ir' 'I ' . 4 -L11 K f 1- - fs1.:fT fY - -, , ' 'JUN ,, ,. . -.,,... ,X 1 K . -5 .4 ,sh - U Au.,- . .' ,vu ef A t' 1. rr -sf-:sa 55 1 f ,.44 , F - V ':ffig5 1 '7 n' ' xg, - 1 . '!i? .' I Y ' if .- v W - 31:-1 , - f' 55, - ,,: 'Ja V , fs +. ,i 6,5 as V 1 facult Q.. Pi? P' ,1n.... .-v, ,. 1 VL-. l ,':1 . '??xI'v3 'll I '!,- W! 5 , E 5 . Q . . 1 5 A I I y 53,115 i, sax , l I ful 11 A I I f' 1 4 nn 1 . ' V! Ill H 'I I ' 5 1 ' i f, 34 jlg . fl 3 :. Q, , , P VE V . tg gggiiuk ,ga f g':Q:E1: r.f 5 I, 3 2 gQF,WmQQ59?S EQm?T?gf? fe Ef2gggEQQQQEESQEEEHQQEQEZFQQE 9 ag Z , 5 - . v V Q ig' pl. ., g if -Q' ,f,l,,.l:ui15,aij2 4 Q 2 QaQ2QSQaafeiiina25:wnQsa?Q w'53 1 wsm ' 1 3 :QQfG5nEkgemef+hf A , .-51:3 Jaw-'flf -'-' ' Y Y ' :fFJ'mHrx -'y?:,1D.i1'. :TT ' ,Q-.5 0 L .ffgfp my ' f awk' . r f 1 X. F! 4 'u M fm-um .- ,..,-.,-.. , -.-L.. -Q SJ 5 v ,1f!'di5 ' w5r'i.m'gE4 J x, s ,far 5, 4. A Q: ? '1 rf' ff ' WE' Q v.-', J '54, 2? mae f 'H Wil? ' . ' . 94 J., 9- ' -V'-n J-' -'. if .N , u, 1,.p,,-w-fx-v-if .. -..,v.-f- .J Nqfyf ' v ,NF ' Q . ww I n N 3 . 1 . ' 1 r . n XT' lil ,li -11 Q ,5 A-hw., ax. ' -. 5 F. ini- 4 'ffbw ,js- . 4 I . . ,f M.-1 , A.. N x W I- 1 not -xx! r A .- gg -L J -' , TT. xv, V , ., - 'l::g2K,, ,,' 2'-...W mum I 3' X' -W- gq, ww- .gm--V ,x - I. Ly, fgp,!,ul.l-.5-,jd , f -. -,7'-'-4.--fzi-.':'n . ,l . -f -5 1 4, . V .cfvnf -Mtn' A' -. f 'f-wllsf 7'5-,lwfgf 1' -'Q - rf- 'f.'w 'f.5 ' I FXS- . ,. -N 1 5 1 0 1 I i - 3 1 1.- 1 vu l 44 l Q 1 1 l i i i 2 K xx Q - an Stililsfa P fog rn m Jeff, what is the 1Hu'Pme ui SMP ANNA! Rive l X1 l z Director ol' tllc Student ,Mlxiwry l'r'ug1.ml l'Il : Ll- .1 , 21CqL12linICd Wltll SMU. il: people: l'L'NUl1lLL'N. 1lga.l.1l1f+x' . -E 1.4. g opportunities and to provide regular and l-.mly .ml-wlwil .l,.1.il-wel. Jeff, what were some ol the lugluliglmu ul vfw 1e...1 .gl v memories? Well Mike. the COl1lDlCllUI1 ul lllu new .1l..lll-:me uw-lg: ,, Student Directory. and SAFE input during the l l'L'Nlllll.lll firm-rfl.1l1fl1 X provided tours for potential SMU studenls. high Ne-lmwl Nklllllllx 1 Najarian. x Quite a year, I replied. Jeff smiled. '15 my sv' 7' 'ii Q? M f s 'X 7 if ' 01 I' 'ww 'Q' 4 ig' E -. W Y , ,. ,, , Iffl L, 1 4 . , , KV Y jf A ,g,2,1, H-, ,i:.1! 'Ill' ,Ulu x ,lL.N.,llL.1!! f ' -'- N0rpfCmred.- CIZFZSDZGZLICUIHU, f,,fzz11ffLj-ll' mf l 1 6, ,, , . fl . 'fl --icuii!!! -1 Q ' ' . Klely, Susan Mg-Cali, AUSUII Slfzzmmz cgi L DD m 5.LlHIHfR 11 N X N Graham Donna Nasford, Careiz Lamkzfz. lxzulz 1 LILIAUH, e Elaine Sfmgiera, Lynn Walsh, Dennis Wilson. 9 0.5 f.m. stereo Hi! We're WUSM stereo 90.5 FM. As the radio station of SMU, We're proud to serve both it and the surrounding community. Within the past year we have moved into a new studio on the second floor of the Campus Center building. Professionals visiting our campus have been totally impressed with our new studio. We also went stereo and have plans of increasing Wattage in the near future. Our staff has steadily increased over the past year. Its present size is approximately sixty people. Progressive rock in stereo, WUSM. Please visit us at any time. 'ln X. .MP HTl'lC Film SCl'lcs lnias spend their money in ill l Series Director. We have two faetions tl out Ms. Cummings. l'eogil..- t. are interested in films as gn: .nl factionsf, Trying to satisfy ln l the series a hard time. The pensive lady points out that l . it films, perhaps foreign films that you twirl Vt-'l'l1.lllf. . lm l 1 . l- available. If the people came to -we them may lit lllt Ht i 1' just don't come to films they liaveuit lielml ot' People today use the visual in forms ol xitlt'olllnll.s.1ytitles:-t satan of intellectual input and people should try to lwrt.i4qtlt-li limi X nw, 1 Q, trying to go to films instead of staying home and Htllillllllj' list' li....l tube, commented the Fine Arts major. I think its ltnportint to time .ln alternative system in a university and people sliottltl utllm- lt . will Cummings. People can always get a different book. but altematiit- tllms .tri-tit readily available, and thatas what is important about the l-ilm Series. NM- offer good opportunities in this areafl .,..v...f---f -, T1'k5aC.'Si- .J.Z'2-5'5f'v - K' f ,r,,.4 ,.. in . se.. 1- . id. --rf-f'4rr4, .7':f-s:x.t.+.:- - Q2 I t A 5-wif' ,f:37'tq 7 .a f is The TORCH years from 1973-1977 lzave been years of change and developmental tension that is the result of our slow transition from radicalism-indeed, many of us who joined the TORCH staff in the fall of 1973 were semi-frustrated radicals. We were the youngest of the Ylower children' generation, and although most of us were in high school and junior high school when our older brothers and sisters were demonstrating, many of us entered college filled a revolutionary spirit that was fast becoming ou tmoded. Mall' Murphy , Editor of the TORCH during the first semester of our freshman year, was regarded as being the last of the avant-garde, radical-oriented editors. Murphms administration featured a rather casual format with grass roots appeal. The 'frequent full-page cover stories implied a certain 'editorializingi that has been absent in recent administrations. One of Murph's more colorful issues featured an entirely yellow TORCH, so that 'those who cleaned their fish with it would get dye stains' News Editor Laurie Campbell succeeded Murph to the editor's post. Laurie was quieter, less radical editor than Mary, and her administration retamed the strong emphasis on the news that had been initiated under her predecessor's administration. Laurie's enthusiastic, flamboyant Features Editor Richard Dagwan followed her to the editorship. Dagwan's sentiments lay strongly in the arts and drama, and the Features Department under his influence has been regarded by many as being one of the most imaginative in TORCH history. Liz Moura, the next successor to the post, had been a features writer under Dagwan's administration. Liz maintained a very personal approach with her staff members, and her strong talents in poetry helped to broaden the literary aspects of the newspaper. Although the administration of Sheila T. Sheehaniwas brief, Cshe succeeded Liz Moura for eigfht weeks following her resignationj her talents in newswriting and her perception of 'Hwhat makes the newsi' helped to broaden the paper's respectability. Sheila's strong news orientation was continued by her successor Richard Downing. Although he continued to follow established story lines, he also suceeded in expanding the focus of the TORCH to include educational issues. TORCH h l. ...al Vets Club The SMU Vets Club has come light years away from its lirst iiieeptioit in l'f Ft: The club has emerged as one ofthe most successful il' not one til' th' most I e. . . t . ttditltw organizations on campus. Vets Club President Brad Burns along with Viet- Presidt-nt Paul HHIWY have brought the club to an all time high as lar as achievement is Cl h concerne . T e Vets Club, now operating out ofthe tainpus Center. n -xt t. tl k O lk' Student Senate office, boast 50+ members and says that its purpose lor existence is to fight for the problems that are unique to veterans and students alike. Linder Brad B . . urns tenure they have done just that. In tact they were awarded the Citation ot' Merit by ONBOARD, INC of New were also praised by the New Bedford Standard-Times for their FOOD DRlVlp in De e b f 76. ' ' c ' c m er o Other successful events this year included: the Halloween Boogie Bashg Christmas Party for the Underpriviledgedg the Special Student Registration I . . U , . . ssue, The Mardi Gras, GONG SHOW, Vet s Club Screw Contest Bike rattle and tl , . lC Aztec Two-SteplTom Rush Concert in cooperationg with the Concert Series. Anyone may become a member of the Vets Club, and all members receive d. . H . tscounts on their events. When asked for a word of profound impact, they replied their slogan, First the Draft, now the Shaft! Bedford for service to the community. They ii S , r t ' . 1 -. W Q 1' ffiho. if fwif S . Q W' ' C, 55353 Q , - . i h ' 35 . , ' ' ' 7' 4? . I 4- J w nf. -P 1 was I V p 6 , v f t X iw J . , . i 1 D 1 s 493' ug ft wtf -,4 nk raft n 'Nite 13 '5 .. f -fbi-7' mite 9 x', h Q img 5 134 V R vw Q! ara G41 'Si' 5, any-f, U N fi' yur' 5 R, v' .,, r M S enum ar A ,QA ,tuaftf QM kan Q I' 4 R ur--ww. If rf' 8? all 1 4. H., I gtpzffvi it V- A 1 . r A if 1: 1 Q. ,, ,S a i ef. . ,- ti . if 3. 'Jw -A ' : 4 A' in , . -'--, t a - if 15.3. . ,I , Kbznll K i. f uk. - li ..s-f. W.. fav. ff. 1 - ' ,vt -2,-t..', . xr ' - ' ' , 'i t ' I ' .. ' . 1 ' ' ' ' tv! Vx W 1 Q .. ,H . IVA, . . T' ' 1 ' - 4 f K, ai ., f I . Q ,, -1 if hx- -, - ,- . A ' nv' 4 Ai ' 'l 'W ,nu - -nr '5 ' A ,Q 1'7 x,,'x, .0 ' we A N-t ,ve ,A , f 4. - S ' 'V , l . Q Nix A , . . -f 5 ' -.' ,gg . v ' 1. ' . .' VT Q . 3. ..f-- . -4 . 1 .ie , . . G' '-4-4 .. ,M 'ag-lr! 1 .L ' V .4 ' -' ut, .Lg ' ' .3 s 3 . , -. in --I . , . if Y. W. F - . .L V , - .i 'nf ' ' , ' Ls 1YQ1n -, ft ' ', 'thx' . Q 5 31,1 4 .K -te . .wwws F-1? 4 ,i ' gf, ' .n ' . ,g vt - - 'U Q .5 N f ' ' M r , '. U a '- . .. ' ' -' ,Q Aan, L-.,, .f v gi J-fs . . f. ia I ' i.. , , . VM.. 1, .,f,:' .vw 4 AHS, . V - , pi- z . ,:..e, . ' V' ' , ' , , , . A- . ,. Y. 4- 5 li: , If .. fi -,-. I ' ' Rt- .ML 'J' 'F ft lx ' .r. Q 'xi .2 .L .. R +1 ', .ij J '- if rv -Q-if - i. n .Q f 1' . A-. 1 -Q., 3-rg 1 . '.,': 'rw' T ,,. ,fr : if -.Q . r - 'T t wf N ll .. few V . ,. , tl! ' In .Q -l l. N , ' 3 E '15 - . ' 4 wh . sv. .. is i f- . , J ag . 4' an .au -49 . -- 'V' AJ.. The Coffeehouse The SMU Coffee House started under the wing of the Concert Series, but in 1974 they became a full fledged organization. The music is basically blues, folk and or the option of the performer. 1977 has been one of the best years concerning the involvement of the students at the Coffee House. Thanks to regular patrons we have had a successful and enjoyable year. Also the dedicated staff has been one of our main assests in producing a smooth and efficient operation. Although this year has been a barren one in the coffee fields, the SMU Coffee House was able to indulge those coffee drinkers who were unable to absorb the high price of coffee and gave them all the free coffee they could drink. Come in sometime and enjoy a cup of coffee. We're open Tuesday evenings. wr l The Crew 24- Concert Series Concert Series Co-Chairman Mike Bulzuno. speaking without his better ll.tlf . . . , J Bob Shea, reflects on the year. It seems that this entire year the t oneert st-rits has been persecuted for one loss and l have along with Bob Sltegt been lteltl responsible for the loss, even though it's the same UI'QLllll!LlllOIl.-Q littlfgttltl continued, I don't see why Bob and l have to be heltl responsible tor that loss when it was incured by our predecessors. 'iBecause of last years defieet CLoggins and Messin1tConeertl and the liiet that that deficet was subtracted from this year's budget. we had little money to work with. 4'However,', says Balzano, we did manage to purehrtse S4000 worth ol sound equipment to cover any act instead of having to rent it. ff wr cr ' .,. ' ' Aug- M A f' ' Q X xg. s . V 4 Q , ' 2 ,1 'gf f ' I ' 'u 5 , K f r 4 . 1 -, f A X ' I K 1 x t J I i n , c-4 --' 3 e-- - ' , glixn.. 1 4 . X N Q 'fs' ,. L ..,, ., , ,Q N , f: A ' X' ' 9' K ' I 'J . mx 1 4 5 ' N , L 7'1A.Qf'7' ' N 1 Jr - ff., A' F. ' , , Hr J- rg- ,lr ' . . ' f ffirplv ' ' . ,ff ' 1 , , f , -.V W 1 , V: -W.-V, - 3 ,--' '. - -- N f2'?'i ag: 7 ffl , Q ,. A ' f Q' 'S 'van c,2Iiq'34,:r.Fv. '- F z?'.,:.: - 4,,f r- - ff X 47' xv V . -A, ,U Q . , kglisk jxf g wxix 5 1 , -, yi M ' ig5,5r,,,5w H .- J f kb A X YQ . 5 .,. ,ar ,A b V , ' X, wv- - V: Miyw, .QA ' nv,-mm..S,,E ,, X5 , - '-1-sw! - wt, .- - , W -M 'ag V W. 5 X, 4 f Q 4 -V Y - -- . 1-Y H A - W . . M Q-M A , ,.., . 5 -,f f Q W f-, waesfg ' , .. ,M ,: ' ' M' ' X Q! 3' -2.-.X ' -MK - -- x 5 -L fr N' ' W., X ' 2-Q .N 3-- N LS ' mfg' 59' W . ,. ' x N, . ,X ,M ,-f-,' ffggw -f sl N. 1 Q . 'v f-4 1 ' r 5- ix - , , , .-fy. X, .N ,5 .--1. Q ,VJ - . X- K Q 'f 'W ..-wwvz 5 - ' ' X .Q-. 5- ,. .-' ,, w , 1 -pie ,L '- . ,, a' rl - ,SA-'f.'f,'.f', . . N..'r' M' . N ' A ,y ' v gf '5 ' '- ,, Q -'fief-Q -v - ' - , ef- ' - ,. .,. ' Q -f 4 x ' . 4. . ' .fx , . ,. x - ' -, g' V K . 1 ,WN A L n Av X, iq .F Xc.,U.fbA 2 fa, V N -ff 'NF s,,5 .f.,' 3 : ,... . X xt. A . ,.,' ,al ' xrx' ie V 'Q M , - -.: f wx. X up Je, H, . -'1 . fx A .Gad-5, r -' A ,Q , Li, ' , X , .hi N v .1 , ' W 'Q -Lauri, I N:-W N x .ff-x-Y , V , X. V Mx . t .tq... X 1 K , . e N , - .- d Q., A f. wc. - V L , - - ' ...J v'-'ff W 4. ' A Rv H .1.h.fqly- , 1 . P- y ' N 1 ,-., X. 'N Xfv '-'wp -. fx- , ,QQ 1,3 - Y. - .1 , I .rn gf- s X . . , ' 1 -Y. Q-512 N 'Ht' Cros s Countr Barry Merril1's late season heroics, Mike Murphyls constant bout with the pain of tCl'ldOI1itiS, and a dissapointing l8th place Nationals finish all linger in the minds of those who followed the up and down fortunes of the SMU harriers over the 1976 season. It was the year of the underclassmen, as a group of talented young freshmen, a couple of enterprising sophomores, and two very cagey juniors led the runners to a sparkling 13-2 record. One of the highlights was a thrilling nail-biter over nationally ranked Marist College in the SMU Invitational. Mike Murphy ran the first of three crucial races despite a knee that kept him wincing. After overwhelming the weak competition at the Tri-State Invitational Classic in Worcester, the harriers trained their eyes Cand legsj on the Codfish Bowl, one of New Englands most prestigious meets. Responding to the pressure of 'csecond seasonw running, Freshman Merrill picked up where he left off at the Tri-State's, with a remarkable 14th place finish. Ironically, the toughest meet, competition-wise, of the year was the New England Championships. Entries included division l schools UMass, Providence, and Northeastern. SMU held its own, finishing 13th in a field of 34 schools. Merrill distinguished himself again, placing 44th. What happened at the Nationals in Cleveland, Ohio no one may ever know. With hopes high from a string of good efforts, the Corsairs stumbled to an 18th place finish, a far cry from l975,s 5th place finish. The light at the end of the tunnel was Coach Bob Dowd's contribution to SMU cross country. He raised his ten-year career record to 106-26. Ultimately, the season proved a testing ground for the new faces. Merril, Murphy, George Itz, Dan Doyle, Brian Ellis, Dave Maguire, Duncan Warden, Kevin Childs, and John Spinney will all return in 1977 with high hopes and valuable experience under their belts. Womens Field Hockey Whether at home on the SMU field or away playing an opponent, the Women's Field Hockey Team brought pride to the University. Winning nine games, losing one, and tieing one, this was the best year yet for the girls. Coach Barb Carriero along with co-captains Barb Donnellan and Claire- Maire Butler led the team against some tough competition. The tie came against Wheaton College in what was the best game all year. Worcester State and Boston College also put up some decent competition but couldnlt quite come up with ties SMU winning those two 2-0 and 2-l respectively. The only loss was the last game of the season verses the University of Rhode Island. URI took SMU completely by surprise winning 2-1. The only Corsair goal came with five minutes to play by Sue Rose. The lady Corsairs did go to the Northeast College Field Hockey Tournament. A three day event, SMU beat Eastern Conneticutt, tied University of Vermont Chosts of the tourneyj and lost to Williams. Five players were chosen for the All-Star Team: Claire-Maire Butler the only senior playing defense: Mary McCarthy high scorer in regular season play with 16 goals, Mary Mello a sophomore forward, Sally Darlington freshman winger, and the goalie Lisa Drouin her second straight year on the all-star list. Lisa was the only one of the five to go on and travel to Pennsylvania for the pre-olympic try-outs. Field Hockey is a grueling sport played with 20 minute halfs and no time- outs Conly for injuriesj. Eleven players are equipped with rounded curve sticks, and ankle pads. Running up and down the field, the girls must be in top shape for the very first game. The field is the same size as a football field, without the end-zone. The gamy has been compared to soccer, hockey, football, lacrosse and rugby. But field hockey has a spirit all its own. Only women and schoolgirls play the game. And it is safe to say that men will probably never be seen on a field hockey field. k-x-x-x-xr-xxx:-xr-:ir-x-k-x-1-rarwifi-f-x-ka-:fx-x-x-xiriri-kat-kara:-x-x:fr-xi:-k-k-x-k-xii-xvfwxfarr-xr i l 4 A 1 '. time? -A 4 .' r ' ' X A ., , K , L 5 , .. .U.y.,3'4iL,,,,g,i.4 M, ' ' 'I .-'51, 'gf ,s '--. . -- A' . w ,., - .dh ' A :gh 'Q 5,1 I . N . M .g9,,LG,e: .. c - ., , f -rv N K ' ,f 1 'J-, W ' ' 3. 4, A .4 v ,W K , Q M Q . xx , W, .inwgxld 2 M .ifx,,.1:1?,.a1 , ' ew-dw . ',Lf1-Q,-2' 5?-5 52? kg . If A g. Ke Q. X .1 W . N ' g , 1 JK? . -225: sig. X 6, Q .YL ' , ' ,. ' 1 .Ml Q W 'eQf ,!l ,' gi -2. A K, . 1 :azz -Q '-'Quakers :lf . -f -f - K. N Q f S' S23 Ear-- Nr1- L, gl .. . r- '- - X.: Q-,.3fJ..:-5-W xg K SXT. ' r- ' if-' ?fNl?l?. SFU ' ' - , - if A 5-A :asf 55,1 ' V Q' , 5 ' ' .5 'emi' 'Es if . ,. .--- . V pb A .,. -T. A X 1 .rl , W 'swim ' uf: I - 'l if-Si? it s wat A N ,+ .Q-1 i ei 1' N r , lsflgss, A .ft v Y xg- .I - A K- V - - . ,,', : g! .1 't - ' . . at. F xml-ss-v f ,t W..-.ri .. . -rr . . .- l - A A.. v-N. ii-Q-kv er Q t 1,5-:H-1 rr I:-f-'. K-5' r ' -' 'efrr' 'X it W ' .D 'S-I' V1 .me X bb 3 s. K In r . 555 we golf ' www, H Yi RWR3 - r . X , 1' X' IX- in if' td? 'sag l' wr' H 'L 5' 1 . ss. i' . . - p 3 I . g ' i ki k'k'k'k'k'ki k'k'ki'i'ttiiitiiiiiiiiiitiiiittki 'kitttt Soccer On a blustery day in Mid-November, the saga of the 1976 SMU soccer team came to an ignoble end, at the hands Cor feetl of the Brandeis Judges, 2-0. But like Camelot, it was nice while it lasted. The season ended in the opening round of the NCAA Division lll Regional Soccer Tournament. The Corsairs, with a 12-1 record, came into the game with a number two ranking in New England, and thus, had the home field advantage. It made no difference that day, however, as the spectacular goaltending of Brandeis, Murray Greenberg stopped the favored Blue and Gold in their tracks. All seasons must end, however, SMU's simply ended a bit sooner then planned. On their way to the tournament, the Corsairs ran up a string of accomplishments their successors will have a tough job following, much less besting. After a season-opening loss to Tufts, l-O, the coach John Barrett led his men to 12 straight wins, tops in New England last year. Immersed in that streak was another, for six consecutive games, the goaltending duo of Randy Sharrow and Peter Carlin 'was not scored upon once Cironically, both of the SMU losses were by shutoutsl. , A fifth straight Colonial Conference title went into the books last year, as well as the fact that the Corsairs not only were undefeated, but also unscored-upon in conference play. SMU's tourney bid was the first in the school's history, and the loss to Brandeis marked the first time since October 28, 1972 that the Corsair booters had been beaten in North Dartmouth, a streak of 35 games. Individually, Bruce Botelho shattered Ameico Aruajo's career scoring record. The senior co-captain finished his brilliant tenure at SMU with a four-year total of 95 goals. This season also marked the farewell of defensive genius Joe Hummel, as well as Bob Lundgren and John Sousa, but everyone else from the 12-2 combine will be back. E Looking ahead, the sights are optimistic for another powerhouse 'in 1977. Looking back? As a old non-Oscar-winning comedian once said, Thanks for the memories? Theatre Co. ISMUTCO The SMU Theater Company is now in its seventh season. It has evolved from a one-play-per-season Theater Clubv into a three-play-per-semester Theater Companyf, In all, SMUTCO casts nine plays a year, including three during the summer. It is comprised of a group of dedicated, hard working students fsome ex-studentsj who, under the directorship and guidance of Angus Bailey and Tom Higgins, devote countless hours to creating superior quality theater. People don't realize the work involvedf' says Gary Hartwell, a 4 year Veteranpf SMUTCO, Angus Bailey has been with the organization since its inception and virtually built it single-handedlyn adds Hartwell. The feeling one gets while talking to theater company members is one of pride. Peter Boorman, an active member of the company says, HSMUTC0 is the second most productive organization on campus, the Torch being the first...It's a bug, once you get involved you can't get away from it. As far as the turn out, Boorman says, You can't get students at this university to watch the show...Most people that do go, our fregulars', are people from the outside communityf' Slvlil does not have a full scale drama department. There are no specific requirements no Theater Major requirements for one to become a member of the group, merely a willingness, to work. 'clt has a lot of potential, says Stephanie Gibson, another theatre company member. It's a good company, but I would like to see more atudenis involvedufl The theater company works on a small budget. The facilities, however, are quite adequrite.. Hur were it not for the time and energy that both students and staff devote to proiiuet ' i .igtr ' not be realized ,-: - -:fn '-Pi . :enum ,M 49 48 .. We ' -1 mf .29 Above left and right Theater Company members featured in The Three Niuskclccr-N . Below left and right, another Tneater Company production: Room Service . smwoa f M..-A , 1- ff 3. '20 34. AY A mm fbi f 5 -ws Ang, 4' . ,NN N 3 1 '.-, 4 , . N K x r . .pi 1 ..f I. N ...!.. omen's Center Sharon, does SMU really need the Womenls Center? Yes, Mike, the organization is definitely needed, replied Co-Director Sharon Boswell Brockett. The health services don't meet the needs of the female students, the counseling center and the health center don't do what we do. Sharon continued, They donlt have an updated list of all the doctors. If a person wants information on problem pregnancy or venereal disease we are the only organization on campus. Reflectively Sharon continued, f'This school tends to be conservative in nature. The biggest problem the Women's Center has had tends to be the lack of awareness of sexism on this campus. Consequently we aren't as much of a group organization as we were meant to be. 'fWomen are hesitant to ally themselves with a feminist oriented organization. The are afraid of being labeled feminist or anti-male, but we try to let students know that we arenlt anti-male, said Brockett, with a tinge of accent. 'SI believe that women's liberation is only part of human liberation from narrowly defined sex roles, said the Co-Director. The purpose of our organization is to counsel and disseminate information on birth control, pregnancy, gynecological problems, VD, etc. We also offer a resource library dealing with issues particularly related to womenf' added Sharon. ffWe organize activities that meet certain needs and desires of the students, such as a single parent discussion group, an auto-mechanics course, educational programs on child birth, birth control, etc. Looking back at 1976-77, you had a big year didn't you, Sharon'?', Yes Mikef, she replied. 4'We had Warren Farrell speak in conjunction with the Lecture Series. We presented the Dimensions of Sexuality in the dorms, the Equal Rights Amendment Luncheon, the Womenls Conference on Labor Relations, we co-sponsored a variety show, formed informational groups for Aid to 7 Children to find out for what women were eligible, were on the Status of Women Committee and have been for the Vets Clubf' on i976-77, is there anything that you and your L ..miian. would have liked to have seen 'Where is a critical need for daycare on cam,-1 be met. ltisjust too bad we don't have ODS. Foreign Language Club What is the Foreign Language Club? Just about one or the l.ll5jt eq organization's on campus, boasting 120 members. under the tluetliuu on .Ionu Gonzalves, President and Maria Tavares, Viee-Presuleul. What is the purpose of the Foreign Language Club? lo furthe: the et-uiael among the students of foreign languages. and to promote eullural at-tuuies lui the benefit of both the members and the eommunilyf' replied the eliullieul Vice-President. Some of the events that we have had, explained Maria. tien- the Bucks for Books Mixer in which we raised S775 for the liluuuy. an international Christmasg and a field trip to see the Whole World L'elehrauou in Boston. We even have a radio program in Portugese on Wllfll. Everyone is welcome to join, please come join, you don't have lo he a foreign language major. ,sn . . TEMPER What is TEMPERT' I asked Steve Lynch, Co-Director of the Student Literary Journal. HTEMPER gives us an excuse for existencef, David Guenette Co-Director chimed in. 'tWhat we have tried to do with TEMPER is to use it as a vechicle through which the student body can express themselves creatively. That's all we have to sayf, 'Graaf 'rl--' f -V1-I '--lvmuwma.- v '-4 '04 F ED Eci-i CLUB The Med Tech Club consists of students who are enrolled in the Medical Technology program here at SMU. The club functions for the past year began with a party at the Lynman House so,that everyone could get acquainted. The club also held various seminars on topics such as Urinalysis and Vena Puncturef' The club attended two conventions, one in Port Chester, NY and the other in Hyannis, Ma. At these Med Tech conventions there are lectures and exhibits dealing with the problems and advancements that Medical Technicians deal with in their professions. The club raised money for these trips by having a cake sale and also by selling T-shirts with Med Techs do it with Quality Control on them. The T-shirts were a great success and part of the profit will enable them to send one representative to the National ASMT convention in Atlanta, Georgia. The Club attempts to familiarize students with the professional aspects of being a Medical Technician and tries to get them involved in activities that will benefit their career in future years. This year's officers were: Elaine Scott - President, Lisa Antonelli- Vice President: Ann Faria - Secretary, Paul Fontaine - Treasurer. boanavia at its Best ful gd. Ei 1 Q ig ' Z5s JF 5 'fx an K. f K 755-5ffyQl5fgP3Q ff'5Qf52Tf,12i1i-5 -42 fimfriifii asmiidgjidfg ng iii: Qfflssmiiff 151 i T5E4zWZXw,gg'?' Tailififi Wifi ggi- ,Lisa Hi? 1515 25 as Wei H ni ii .a' Q' ji KAL? Pa QQA-vw Q 55 + f?'5fQH6U?. H frtb ff55f3'5'g EZ '17 'H 473 Zfj5f? ?'vA3:,1l2'2liiL5a. Mag ,kgiHiQf?a,f+ -f- igiffl gggfgigiigbf iiiiahiigi VJL Wig 'fm gigflif-vig? 27551 151a'5fJ?3EZ-3' igi g5z31f?a62 L9'J i-gffjyf SEQ? ff '+'?fff'??Vd'aTf-'-3? ,www fiflfwiwi 'aff 6- x o l? s,':F.' U mei-if ,xy 4f'fi1Tg4i fls 5 M ji jx Vi gi 2 if Z A b i git fi gf jg 'lZp':riBb Pfl' '55-jg lg 57- fx CP fi jg '47 ff 3? ? 1 'W x.-Q-f,XX'ff', A -' A - ' F x'-' ,AF ' . M is i The Chinese Student Association The Chinese Student Association fC.S.A.J has been in existence since the Fall of 1972. Originally formed with a membership of ten, the association was formally chartered by the Student Senate in 1975 as a student organization on campus. With the help of Dr. C.N. Wu, the Association has grown to an organization of sixty members consisting of faculty members, students, and friends of Chinese origin, students from other Asian countries as well as American students interested in the Chinese culture. The chief function of the Association is to promote cultural exchange at SMU. lt seeks to provide such a service through a program that includes the teaching of Chinese martial arts, the showing of Chinese movies and the presentation of lectures by Chinese scholars. A free course of conversational Chinese will be offered this summer. The association has sponsored a wide variety of social activities including dinner parties, summer camps and a Chinese New Year dance. It also contributed to the orientation and accomodation of incoming Chinese students. The most important activity sponsored by the association is the Kung-F u fChinese Martial Artl club founded by Masters Jason Tsouand Jimmy Guo. It provides a balanced physical training program for the individual and its achievements is further reflected by a series of successful demonstrations of Kung-Fu at a number of university communities in New England including MIT. URI, U.Mass., Brown, etc. The association wishes to acknowledge the generous support from the Student Senate. lt looks forward to meeting new challenges in the next academic year and plans to provide better services to its membership and the SMU community. L 1 7 E Q- I S s gal 9 l A L 04.1 A g.1.5Sj I 1 . ' i.2'a4.' 'QS I 07,4 tiger? 258 ii' - ,, ... HJ ...sh- Q. 4--1 271 Qin. -., :- 1 ,A ' :,-1' . fggffzv ,grim Q 'aff I lr' -.f:f941f1f:2.2zT Ili?-2.1-Wm g,pf:-f-.f- we f. .mg :g. , gg.f: iksznfgfg f's,Q2ll1?72-Nw .1 , sy 3 . . .J '. 1.1-at gf' , 5 MM- ,, Q I' -, -V51-'31,-gg ' X ,s ig -- Q ,-1. fx 3Qf':. j.--' ily? 'N aff 2 ibm , A '5iXv..51?:s,m -gpg f-, V X -,.,.-fx,-.mi iv -.qtgimyx f .W-aft -J f 'fvgfgxx y -ii V ne,-G-,,-fl' E lawns yt Bo. The Sailing Club The Sailing Club has enjoyed a good fiscal year. Past years sailing has evolved around other peop1e's boats. This year the Sailing Club purchased three small sailing craft for club use. This money was raised by the hard work of Sailing Club members andthe generosity of many people in this area. Commodore Paul McGarr wishes to extend a public thank youv to all those who made this club work. Other Sailing Club officers for the 1976-77 year include: Vice Commodore - Clark Smedstead and Treasurer - Bob Clysdale. Q3 'Y' V if-Ti: f-v i i 1 Q A i A . .1 igfffgief 1 ' 55 'N Q5 ma :gg . , ' , ' ' ' f-, Le - ,V X 5. nn ,i 4 5 L , . K . J ffjigf, f , X fy Ria. 535 , M' 0 M. QQ : - - , Y, w . - - s E Tig 4 ' Q- . ' ., ' .- '-Q me W , , , , ' 'ri-r . 1:51 S' . - -W 1 -, , N., -' ff-' 7 N' 1 Q C ' .4 , , V ,F mx v ,A 'fill - ' I 'ff , V .' 1 1' E- A11 j z 'V -G VY' -M Q , A g , ,Z -HL , . , . B - . - -' 0 f , '-, i af if 1 V gl, ... , , f A ,.. A 1 sf- - ' v ' V ' 3 7 ff .sr - I as I . 'fl 1-,1 ff ' W - V, .fc A, 1- L A, -A Q A,-gi.: - X .1 f MQ:-Q 3,6-. :gig .. , , ' - 1 ' .5 ,Lp X ' Jw.-ff ,. V, .,. f . -1-I-, ' , 9. 4 f- :fag . ga X' J, .,Q,jy,,' 3,115 'gg f ' w :M 1, 'X 3-. . win , - -,AU -4' f tv- . 0 ..,. r ' f ' - N. L5 ' .' X .1,1,yQ, . ,gg-. all ,QL , r - A ,r :gag , Q p p' 'T S 2+ -.ti-:fee 'Al' '1-wsffg H X wc- M A 'I-' rw W L -. 'sl :se aft, s X ,.:' arm.,-rf -Irs ' ' 'Hg - x '. ...G fiiixvzfri-sf - :Ss -value: fi iizzai A it . ca I s'w f!ilH15Lz-'fff-QE 'Q N v xrzrfxa 2-f',sQf-'axlyfqf r f N. if :J 1 rim 1- l:1a?..:Hmal uv: - 'fl::f:4f'h, '4..:x.1Qp:.f--3. - - X- -v ,-in YN-1:5--52lWi.t:i5w ew., , fp--evra , iw , ' S. wi X yQ.5'i15'Qi-Qff3'.if'gxf -,.+ ,Q if , -Sr' g f . a w' f 1 w4l '.- 'f'N - .1 .im WS?-fi1':f3:a1j . N ::i'T:Elf1ie321-ff,.,A - y . 47 W vi, ' sif t 372'E fVsfll f' 5 IV '72 lr ' r 'ries-3'3,:1.fD1'L.f 1: F ffl -1 . , ,.. Y Hiiafrs1 -Hr'-an -a :- Q H655 NTS 2 C . Q l H-CU Q, sr X? , il 5 , . fx, 4 . .. s ,.-, , . . .gat .X- F The Inner Space Society of SMU has been plagued with many major problems this year. Real interest in the club has waned since Bob Salerno, president during 1974-75 left SMU. Under Dennis Stokoweski's administration, 1975-76, interest began to dwindle Slightly but energy levels remained fairly high, and there was good participation in club dives. But 1976-77 will be remembered as a downer year. Dave Hoff, president of the organization, saw numerous changes occurring in the club, the major problem being too many seniors and not enough underclassmen. Also the death of Bob Potts, Dive Officer and Number One Scuba Diving Enthusuast of the Year. Bob's death was a tremendous blow to the solidarity and unity of the organization, and although Bob was not the president, he worked in an almost Symbiotic relationship with Dave Hoff. Potts was a central figure in the organization and after his death, club members just scattered, people turned to other pursuits over diving. High points this year were the Run-a-Thon, organized by Bob Potts and others to raise money to buy a 'cResci-Annie, a doll used for First Aid and Cardio-Pulmanary Resusitation training. Also underwater hockey, a big favorite, and underwater monopoly were items for memory lane. Xi , lv v ' ,'4' 6 , . ,... S.. , . ,, ,, Qt W 'WP ' - - ,. ,, , sf: , , , ,, . xt -1--Q-.ef .aw -1. X t 1. Q EY 5 9 wmx? .uns af?W ,, , ,,,,., f as at ' 1, , V V ' Nfff: : , LK . 4:44 :- , -3 nggei- ,-as az , 7 '- .ifkiri it .. s 'l 1 ix- '- : x Y X i9..i?.fe Y i'-.- . A is Y C l Q r 12727 -1, at ' .iffflf 'Q F-573 ei-'I M Y .. ., Ulu: 511' A 1 if-mg' . .?lFi.5,., . 51-, 5 - - 5 wr 1 fi ' . I l MINWIVM Ziff, 31355: 4 'xi' 'S'-Q: Q34 AEE! SMU ACCQEDITED The Hooker is a Bookie - Administrative Consultant to the Bucks for Books', campaign, Associate Dean of Students Mary Louise Walsh. Be a Bookie!! tRightJ Campus Shop Manager Ernie Wheeler presents 'cBucks for Books Chairman Kevin Rice with a donation for the campaign. fLeftJ Members of the Bucks for Books Legislative Lobbying Effort, from left to right: Manuel Tiny Femandez, Christopher Trundy, Marie Muir, Kathy Ren, Doris Dunn, Kevin Rice, Joyce Dunn and Andrew Brierley. i GB CKS FOR BUOKSW? A campaign to raise money for the SMU library came into full force during the 1976-77 academic year. Bucks for Books signs, pamphlets and bumper stickers were seen everywhere. Why- Because SMU's library was 99,000 volumes shortnof set ,standards for a state university. Due to this deficiency, SMU could lose its accredidation. Students, administrators, faculty and alumni joined forces to see what could be done. Fund raising events were held and donations sought, but the largest part must come from the state. SMU confronted Governor Michael Dukakis with the library's outstanding deficiency and as a result some aid has been given. Not enough aid however. and so SMU will keep efforts going until the problem is alleviated. l I .,...-1 Electronic Technician Roger Lavoie and SMU students r 5 l 1 1 'fl if omrer Producer and Director of Campus News Dick Gwen Graphic Artist Jim Feeley SMU TELEVISIO SMU Television has grown at a fairly rapid clip in the past three years. Since Dick Owen's reign as producerfdirector of the Campus News, interest has grown. In September of 1976, SMU TV expanded through the efforts of Bob Archer, Liz Bryne, Walter Frost, ROger Lavoie, Jim Feeley, Bill Aguar, Paul Souza and others. The programming being done went to a cable TV hook-up in New Bedford , and New Bedford High School. The programming progressed from the Campus News shows produced and directed by seniors Mike Laney and Bob Johnson, to encompass the SMU game show, The Third Degreef, Dave Baker's baby and a comedy show, Mezzanine Madnessv was born. The potential learning opportunities that are available for students through the SMU TV department are immeasurable. The past three producers and directors of the news department there are all pursuing careers in the field of TV due to the patience and help they received through people like Bob Archer and Liz Bryne. Granted SMU TV may have a long way to go, but it's come a long way! Photos by EGH LaHaye Du'ector of Television Services Bob Archer Ei STU E TJ DICIARY The Student Judiciary, particularly the University Court, had a record docket for the 1976-77 season. Anthony Ferreria Jr. presided over the court in one of its most protracted cases: t4O'Neill vs Student Senate. It was with this case that the Court began to expand. Contempt of Court charges with Disciplinary Probation sanctions were levied against certain individuals inhtheir dealing with the Court. The Court moved cautiously and carefully thanks to the eyes and ears, and minds of Justices Fradique Rocha, Paul Fistori, Roger Tache, Denise Haywood, Dave Berger, Mike Laney, John Twomey, Chrissa O'Brien, Bob Bento, Richard Larschan, :and Chief J usticess Cat various timesj Tony Ferreria, Truzzel DeRamus, and Bill Herbert. Perhaps the court's finest and most difficult case was O'Neill vs Student Senate Election Committeef' It was in this controversial case, presided by Chief Justice Bill Herbert, that the Court really stood out. The Court upheld O,Neill's appeal that stated, The Senate Election Committee by declaring that 21 ballots cast for neither candidate, were votes of H110 pr6fCrCI1CC,' It was here that the Court took a bold interpretation of the decision and upheld O'Neill's appeal 7-2, thus giving him a vote of C01-ifidencew in his bid for Student Trustee, for 1977-78. The Court ruled that a Hballotl' is not a f'vote and cannot be counted as a vote of no preference. Chief Justice Bill Herbert and Justice Rick Rousseau cast the dissenting votes in this historic case. In totality, it is safe to say that 1976-77 will be the year that the Student Judiciary made quite a splash. ,greatness lik at MQ 'B 'ff An-gig-5-it 7f:32'iif,?fSa Jr. Kevin 0'Nejll STUDE TPROGR MM NG h In our attempt to cover as many student activities as possible, SCRll1lSll.f1I1' chose to interview .Michael Gubler, one time Acting Programming Coordinator, later Assistant Programming Coordinator for the Student Activities Programming Office. S: Mike, what were some of the highlights of 1976-77 concerning the programming done through your office? MG: We had the usual three main programs: the October Beerfest, Champagne Ball and the Spring Ball. S: Was there 'anything different about tlzese events in relation to past years? MG: There was much more interest: ticket sales were greatg we were selling out in close to one half hour for these events. The actual events themselves were more of an up situation. They've grown past the mixer stage, they are now real annual events that people look forward to. At the Beerfest in particular, people really let go 3 they really got crazy, but had a good time. S: What factor would you attribute to the large turnout for these events? MG: The opening of the new dorms. We have more people. The balls are very traditionai, almost iike a prom affair. They are classier, an event of significance, something that people look forward to. S: Spring Weekend was a big event for your ojntice, wasn 't it? MG: Yes, Spring Weekend '77 or something similar to it hadnlt been tried since the Gentle Thursday years. Since Spring Weekend was so successful it will probably come back again. We might get back to a Woods of Dartmouthl' event. S: The Dance Companies were a ditfferent type of activity, weren 't they? MG: Right. the dance companies were different. With aid from the National Endowment for the Arts. we brought the Raymond Johnson Dance Co. That show had mixed success and didn't draw as well as the Acme Dance Co. That act really drew people. and everyone who saw it really liked it. ln fact it got a standing ovation. The whole show was really bizzare. 1 think it might have changed a few people's opinions about modern dance. All in all, the year was definitely a big improvement over last year. We got a bigger budget. Hopefully the Board Governors will see that we provide a service to students and to the community and that it's not all fun and games. We should have more mini-courses like the mixology course, but we just donlt have the money. A .ffl 7.25 xx 4 X What is the BOG? ' The BOG consists of representatives from all the groups that make up the university community: commuter students. resident students, administrators, continuing studies, graduate student association alumni, and student senate. The purpose of the BOG as outlined in our enabling act is tor lj Increase the efficiency of the Campus Center. 25 Increase the varience of opinions in the governing of the Campus Center. 31 Establish specific goals and recommendations for the Campus Center. ln reality, the BOG does even more: approving the budgets, recommending the fee, approving all dates for the use of the building, recommending and approving all programming for the building, recommending and approving all programming for the building, and looking constantly to the future for the expansion and improvement of the Campus Center. History of the BOG The Board of Governors was formed in March 1973 as the body responsible for governing the Campus Center. At the time of its creation, the Campus Center consisted of basically a cafeteria and a pool hall in addition to the Campus Shop, and student offices. Now, we offer two of a Rathskellar fthe only student-run operation that makes money in Massachusettsj, a stereo listening center, a complete games' room, the Sunset Room PM fa room offering an alternative atmosphere to that of the Rathskellarl, plus a continuing series of special events, Spring and Christmas Balls, a Beerfest, and other valuable and enjoyable activities. 527753. the Campus Center had to pay its own mortgage on the building, which gave us a fee of 5960.00 per fr the prospect of a Sl20 00 fee, the BOG and other interested groups undertook the successful j!4fl?fai111ig11 1 1-.Lite take over the payment of this mortgage. This has resulted the Campus Center fee being iowerergi. ln ff involved in the creation of the Campus Center Budget and all aspects of the programming and rsgvgr.. . ' The Board of Govern ferr? to a more successful and progressive future based on expansion and more innovative activities to his university. Where is the BOG-office? The Board of Governor's office . .. the second floor of the Campus Center, and can be reached at extension fldl. li you have a problem. questic. 'z please feel free to contact us. l.'v'vEe here ripe serve you! BOARD OF COVER TORS The B.O.G. that managed the SMU Campus Center in 1976-77 had the distinct advantage of working witha budget of approximately one half million dollars. The B.O.G. since its inception had been basically an advisory body with little or no money. With state takeover of the Campus Center in the spring of 1976 the B.O.G. in cooperation with Richard Waring, Director of the Campus Center constructed a budget that was directed at student needs and interests. The Programming budget alone was tripled over previous years and programs were in abundance throughout the entire year. The year itself commenced in a rather confusing fashion. The Search and Screen committee for Night Supervisor and Assistant Direcotr of the Campus Center was contested. President Walker felt that the best way to rectify the problem was to establish a new Search and Screen Committee. The new committee was formulated and the result was the B.O.G. and the Campus Center Staff struggled through the'year. Finally in April of 1977 Mark Nahorney, Programming Coordinator, and Robert Sacco, Night Supervisor were officially ratified by the Board of Trustees. 'lo entertain any type ot business in the titesetite of I6 B.O.G. members at times was quite a solatile situation. Personalities often exploded lltlu lttttiftis debate. To avoid lengthy meetings and rhetoiit three committees were established to deal with the business ofthe Board when it wasn't in session The Programming Council proved itselt' to be an effective subcommittee of the B.O.G. ll' you attended any part of Spring Weekend l'in sure you will agree. The Alcoholic Beverage Committee had the task of implementing a plan to recover S1500 due to the fact that someone in a tit of drunken rage destroyed the mens room in the Rathskellar. The Finance Committee of the B.O.G. was without question the most powerful committee of the Board and was largely responsible for the closing fo of the Sunset Room-a decision unpopular to many. However the room at its closing had lost several thousand dollars. Although the year at times was very turbulent I am very proud to have served as your representative. Hopefully many of you will return to SMU in the years ahead and seem many of the improvements that were planned of. talked of. and thought of in our Senior Year at SMUU. Best 0fLuck to You All Steven McGrath Eg! is BLACK STUDE TU IO In November of 1969, while many students around the country were demonstrating and revolting against the oppressive forces of the United States government-particularly its domestic and foreign policies- a group of concerned students at SMU decided to organize themselves in an effort to combat, among other things, racism. It was an historical period in the evolution of the United States when the Black Consciousness movement reached a somewhat unprecedented peak Cie., aside from Nat Turner's revolt, or the Black Awakening of the 2O's, etc.J The organization was called the Black Student Union. For the past eight years the Black Student Union at SMU has dedicated itself to raising Black Consciousness and education both the student body and the general public, as to the positive aspects of the Black experience and BlackAmerican history. By working closely with the SMU Lecture Series, Concert Series, and a host of other organizations, the BSU provides the sensitivity and insight needed to develop a meaningful cultural and academic atmosphere on campus. Each year the second week in February isset aside as Black Emphasis Week and both members of the SMU and local community take part Ea caaitural and social awareness seminars. And traditionally the Black is commemorated for its active stand in the Black man's fur i'rSed0m. fr,,:r:,da:iierital philosophy of the Black Student Union is that is necessary means for upward mobility, and its purpose we trend as was seen through the eyes of W.E.B. .I HQ':Q! ' l ' eff- . 1 'Q yi 'H Sf N--he Q V ,f 'Qu 1 1 1' -1 4: FEHICAR, IQ CLUB CHESS C UB Tlw SML' fllcw. Club in :nnliun MSSN 1Ni1lSS2IL'hllSClIS Scnzltc of Student Nurws QSMLR qhuplcrl '-n.--f w' F' ' 3,71 , uv .1 l ' .L 1 - '00 mf Fi' ' l murmur m'W mmm EQUAL FUNDI G? In the Fall of 1976, equal funding for SMU aroused many members of the university community to take action. Marcel Ledoux, head of the Maintainence Division of the SMU Chapter of the Massachusetts State Employees Association led union members of SMU's Faculty Federation, MSEA and Educational Services Division in a protest march to promote funding of their salary contracts. The march was followed by a rally held in the SMU auditorium. Topics of debate there included equal funding per student for SMU, funding university contracts and money for accredidation. campaigns of students, faculty, staff and administrators showed the legislators that 1,l Eli there are special needs which should be met. ooaooo0oaoWINTER Photo b PEOPLE AND PERSONALITIES Nu.-u--q 'Ulri- I -as , ik.. g 'I DEAN HOWARD Former Dean of Men, now Associate Dean of Students, Donald C. Howard is a well known administrator on campus. During the past I1 years Dean Howard has been administrative consultant to numerous student organizations including the TORCH, SCRIMSHA W, and Student Senate. His involvement with students has endeared him to many over the years. A special feeling exists between Dean Howard and the members of the Class of I 9 77. Because of this closeness, the dean was selected by the students as the administrator to be interviewed for the '77 SCRIMSHA W. S: You have the reputation of being one of the most colorful, influential, and best known administrators on this campus, certainly more visible, and often controversial, both in a positive and negative respect, especially in relation to student politics. You are also seen as a complex man with strong values, convictions and feelings about life. Why do you think you acquire this reputation and would you be willing to discuss some of the values and convictions that you see as important in your life? H: Well, I suppose the flip and simple answer to your question would be to say that I acquire that reputation because I am what I am and like every individual, what I am is subject to the perceptions of others. And perceptions are really what the first part of your question is about. However, perceptions are difficult to deal with because they are affected by various factors, not the least being the degree to which a person is truly known by those doing the perceiving. Let us deal for starters with my supposed controversiality. Anyone in a leadership role who takes their decision making responsibilities seriensiy is bound to be controversial. Decision makers never please everyone. Now add to this basic working principle the following: uersoiiality highly defined and up front: a blunt manner that can be unsparingg an Irish temper that at 'times is 1 1 Eow flash- pointg a robust ego, however not so excessia. . keep the person from saying 'Tm sorryf, or ul was xvrc-. 1 ,slightly authoritarian approach that is not afraid to dia f I s and call a halt to situations where per1nissixl..uqgff Ea counter-productiveg an enjoyment in bullying bullies, yet the same time having a non-adverseness te - leaning on others that technique :i.fcessaiy to a desired response. It-flif-41 I this with ri tenacious will, a confidence in personal judgments and insights, strong convictions, delight in making decisions and bringing to bear on those decisions powerful skills at persuasion for their acceptance, and what do you have? In this instance, Don Howard, and the stuff of which perceptions are made both good and bad. Am I complex? Of course. Isn't everyone? I don't think I'm any more so than anyone else. Certainly there is nothing very mysterious or hidden about my person. What you see is what you get, give or take ten percent. The allusion to my presumed influence in student politics is like the line about old soldiers, it never dies, but I hope it will fade away. I know there are those who are naive enough to think that I cultivate certain students as pets and as political pawns in order to build a student power network that I can manipulate for my own purposes. Nothing could be further from the truth. The Dean Machinen charge was a myth from the day it was first hatched in the fevered minds of the excited supporters of a Student Trustee candidate several years back. An amusing turn of phrase, but a cheap shot. It has been promoted since by a small group of students who fancy themselves as radicals and defenders against the imagined Machiavellian designs and intrigue of the administration. How ridiculous. Obviously, the vast majority of students see it for what it is - an insult to their intelligence. I It should be remembered that the Student Life Office has more consistent daily contact with students on a wider range of matters than any other office in the University. This gives those in it an excellent opportunity to observe the overall student scene, and to assess the qualities of emerging leaders. I wonlt deny that I have encouraged numerous students over the years who showed talent for leadership to get involved in various activities that would develop their potential. Nlanv ol' these students were individuals I was drawn to hy the natiural chemistry of human interaction. and in most cases this lead to strong personal commitments. But this vvasn't because I was interested in making them power pawns. They were all too intelligent and independent to ever lend themselves to that kind of a relationship. What is more, I shall continue to exercise my perogatives in this way. That kind of personal advice and guidance is at the heart of my role as dean and is why I feel this office is an important part of the total educational process at SMU, or any other university. As for my values and convictions they have been greatly influenced by those religious concepts and tenets in which I was raised as a youth. Though I share with many of my student friends something of their disillusionment with the organized church today, as a professing Biblical Christian. I still believe in a personal God, Creator of a divinely ordered universe, a God in whose image and likeness we are made. But I also hold with the belief that as human beings we are in nature flawed creatures whose redemption from a propensity for evil can come only through a process of spiritual regeneration, accomplished by a conscious act of faith in God's Son, Jesus Christ as Saviour. What the man in the White House, Jimmy Carter, refers to as being born again? While I have not, unhappily, always given manifestation of these beliefs in my daily actions, they have had, nevertheless, a profound effect upon the shaping of my attitudes and feelings about life. Because of them I accept the fundamental Judaic-Christian position that the human person, despite the flaws, is sacred, endowed by God with an infinite dignity and value that nothing can ever compromise. Anyone who knows me knows that people are central to my life structure. Because they are, human relationships therefore are primary in my system of priorities. When I speak of relationships, Im not talking, of course, about those kinds of diluted, superficial interactions between individuals that sometimes pass these days as a genuine relationship when in fact they are merely acquaintanceships. Like ships that cross at sea they are aware of the presence of the other, but only at a distance. No, I am speaking of that kind of outreach between people that leads to a human connectedness, that creates a friendship, a relationship that has nearness not distance to it, that is lived out on such a deep an trust level that the intimacy of sharing onels inner person, and exploring the private reaches of each otheris soul can be realized without fear of risk. As I define it, a true relationship must have the capacity to grow roots, to have staying power between persons who have substance. But above all, it must be a bond that gives sustenance to the heart's needs for that love and companionship that are the only defense that we as human beings have against the loneliness that haunts us all. ' Idealistic though it may be to think that we could have relationships of this kind, I would maintain that without them our lives have little chance for developing real meaning or joy. If there is any advice that I would want to leave with the graduates of the Class of '77 it would be this - that you learn over the years ahead to cultivate warm, deep, supportive human relationships of the type we have been describing. Note that I said learn. All of us have some instinct left over from the innocent days of childhood, if it hasn't been crushed altogether, for reaching out to others. But for most of us it is a response that requires learning anew, learning first to discover and accept ourselves, to be open and genuine, to get in touch with and express our feelings, to be who we are without facade, learning to accept and care for others, and to develop an ability to step into their personal world and attempt to see it as if it were our own, to so demonstrate our trustworthiness that mutual vulnerability will result, the one condition that must be present for true LlL'Illll U 'I'r I... fiI.i!llL't.l lllal si.,!, learning tie A -U if , ,,4,g.mm.x ,,q.,,l.,, .. lrelllelltlutis ell- it I 5 y typ.,-A fp. .MH ,fp whether in IllLtlll.1l'L'l'l ritzni .g if it an l'kll'v1Ll t... l- are to grow antl to liecoine inoie .i.at.. .aallit-1.-ti. i. tb. ell-'Il lllllhl lk' lllllllt. None ol us tan .ilii-I-l to It-rect that Iel.iItI1i'ts the name ol the gaine ol lit.- 'v1,,.,- 5 'itil-V' ip., ,.,im,,tm. interest and concern ol voui Int- I.. I., ,,,,, ,im will ,.,..,h. YOU yvllr greatest pain. liut also your pr-.alqt ,lei-.,yy Money. fame. position and power all if..-,Hia I satisfactions. but only in relationships ot vu-ttli v-.ith 5 -1-ple can your satisfaction Ive complete. Live life willl intensity. As one who has intensity in his makeup. l find its release by eoinniitinent and loyalty to those things and people that l care deeply aliout .intl lielteve in. Unfortunately. that very intensity. particularly as it involves loyalties and commitments to people leaves one. I liilttl. unprotected and desolate at those times when it is not reciprocated. And I am continually amazed at the numtiers ot people who are incapable of such reciprocation. who have no strong commitments or feelings about anything or anyone. I find that sad for to truly live is to feel and to have commitment. So I urge you to live with intensity and to release it in whatever constructive way you can. Fairness. honesty and courage are the virtues I most covet for my character. Fairness because its practice will keep me humanly decent. Honesty because it frees me to he open. to be real and to be myself. Courage. because in the words ot my hero, Winston Churchill. it is the one virtue that makes all other virtues possible. Then there is love the transcendent value of them all. without which neither humans or their relationships can function. without which it is doubtful that fairness, honesty and courage can survive within the human soul. I truly believe that loving is the one force that motivates us to give of ourselves to fellow htnnan beings. It is the supreme and most fulfilling of human activities. These are some of the important values. convictions and feelings. I hold about life. Maybe they will help you to think upon and see yours more clearly. S: Is tlze influx of dorm students ntangv of wlfonfz come from more affluent backgrounds changing the basidmake-up of tlze SMU student body which luis been largely working class? If so. how will this affect the average SMU student? H: Yes, the overall complexion of the student body is changing, but not drastically since the dorm students are just 25 percent of the total student enrollment. I don't anticipate that ratio changing for many years. Therefore. the majority of our students are commuters from the region. The dorm students come mostly from other geographic regions and many of them do come from upper income homes. I see nothing wrong with this. It simply means that we are at last getting the kind of mix we should have here. After all. isn't' exposure to different cultures. different economic and social backgrounds, a significant part of the college learning experience? I think this benefits everyone. Sf No doubt you have witnessed a change in the attitudes and tlze overall composition of the student body since the late 1960 is. Can you describe this change! H: Yes, there is a change. We see today a more inward. personally directed kind of student. It isn't that they are less concerned about social conditions and issues than the students of the 60,s, they just demonstrate their caring in quieter, and more practical ways. They are not as IllUCll INTO posturing a radical stance as were their predcCeSSOrS. BUT The tighter state of the economy has forced them to be more Continued on page 52. Continued from page 51. conscious of their economic futures, and therefore, to conform to the more traditional values of the society. The students of the affluent sixties could aftbrd to be more carefree. The students of today don't seem to be as attracted either to the mystical and communal life styles of the past. There is a conservative streak in them. However, when making these generational comparisons, we must realize that we are dealing with two very different time periods. The 70's has seen a slow return to more conventional living, trying to absorb and consolidate what changes the upheavals of the 60's gave us. On the other hand, the 60's was a traumatic decade of extreme contrasts, love and hate, violence in the cause of peace. It was one of those societal watershed periods that comes along every so many centuries. It will be remembered as a time when young people tried to be a potent force and were, in ways more extensive than they possibly realize. There was a lot about it that was exhilirating and vibrant. There was also a lot about it that was loony, immature and anti-intellectual in its behaviour. But there is no denying that it was an age that has provided todayls young people with an atmosphere in which they can be more creative and open and freer to be themselves without the exaggerated attitudes and forms of that era. S: This question comes in two parts. One, what is your opinion of the extent of drug use on campus, and two, how do you feel about legalization of marijuana? H: I think there has been a decrease in hard drug use on campus, and maybe even a very slight lessening of marijuana use. Of course, it should be understood that marijuana is almost an intrinsic part of the culture today, not only the youth culture, but of society generally. That's why I think we will see the legalization of marijuana in the lifetime of most of us. The first step has already been taken - the deciiminalization of marijuana. On deciiminalization, I have no problem. But as for legalization, I'm not so sure. The jury isn't in yet on the long range effects of marijuana. Until it is, I wouldn't want to see the bars let down altogether. Society suffers grieviously enough from the uninhibited indulgence of the drug, alcohol. Why add another? S: You have worked more closely with student leaders over the years than probably anyone at SMU. Could you give a candid appraisal of some of these leaders and in doing so reveal what you think are tlze qualities of leadership? For the sake of conciseness take the most recent Student Trustees and Student Government Presidents - Chevrier,'Sutcliffe, McGinn, Hoffman and Trundy. H: Paul Chevrier -In my mind he was probably the most gifted all-aroimd student leader we've had to date. He wasn't into -r,1 'f'2ecv::ninicnt, he also made significant COI1tl'iiEL1ii0.'1i1 :ff i :1E':f5?1l2me1it Qf the fadjg Station and the de.:iopinci.i. ice life program. He is a man with a clear, sharp irate-2. , is tri f.ece' rccly independent. Very much his own man. lillrei, . F-,rifii'i'iei'ii'y and natural xuztlroritarianisrn about hiizz 1 ' Mm in getting things done. Paul wore well over rffetch. A proven performer. Andy Sutcliffe - Andy was V 1529, Hflgst sophisticated politicakanimal ever to . .e.Q. student politics in the ll years l've been here. He . 1, fuel and instinct for political strategy and a touch of the MacL'i.i..finfeilian about him. It was obvious that he loved the game, and he was fun to watch in those years. He was the only one to hold the three major posts of Student Government - Treasurer, President and Student Trustee - a fact that testifies to his leader skills. But it was his smooth, polished ability to articulate what was going on in that agile brain of his that set him apart. His handling of himself on the day of the famous Campus Center rally was a prime example. He did his fellow students proud on that occasion. Overall, he was outstanding. Paul McGinn - Paul, in my estimation, is the shining example of how valuable for personal development participation in student activities can be. He grew perceptibly as a person and in his role as a student leader as a direct result of his involvements. He was the most widely known and genuinely respected student leader of recent years. He had no enemies and few critics, and that wasn't because he didn't take stands because he did. It was his firm, but even, and mellow personality that made his positions acceptable if not always agreed with. Self possession,balance, excellent insights and judgments about people and situations were the strengths that characterized him as a splendid leader. If he should choose politics as a career, I think he has the making of a political star. Maybe a future Governor of this state. Tim Hoffman - A person of great integrity. It would never cross the mind of anyone who knew Tim Hoffman well or worked closely with him to ever doubt his honesty or motivations. In fact, I would have to say that in terms of his fairness and personal decency, he has one of the finest characters of any individual I have ever worked with. A truly good human being. Totally trustworthy. He was also the least self-aggrandizing student leader I've dealt with around here. Not an ego trip in him. Regrettably, he lacked confidence in himself and his abilities. His passive, non-assertive nature worked against him. To be an affective leader one has to have a healthy sense of dominance and certainty about what you believe in. Tim didn't have this which made his leadership experiences frustrating and anguishing at times. However, when he does arrive at that point where he realizes how competent and talented he really is and becomes more committed to people and ideas, heill be an excellent leader. He has the charisma as well to go with it. Chris Trundy - It was no secret around campus that Chris and I had our differences and a rather turbulent interpersonal relationship. However, I think I can be fair and reasonably objective in my assessment of him. He is very bright, with a quick wit and no small measure of charm when he wants to be charming. But I feel that he badly misjudged the mood and attitudes of the student body. The confrontational negative style is just not the mode that SMU students want from their student leaders. It is divisive and unproductive. Chris had vision and saw a need for change and that is to his credit. Unfortunately, the abrasive approach alienated others from seeing that vision as well. It would be my hope that as he continues to mature he will derive greater emotional security from knowing his own considerable abilities because he has much to offer. The summation of what I see as the ingredients of leadership might be put this way - the drive and maturity of a Paul Chevrier, the articulation and political skills of an Andy Sutcliffe, the self possession and insight powers of a Paul McGinn, the integrity and goodness of a Tim Hoffman and the vision of a Chris Trundy, overlaid with the bright intelligence that they all possess. ,--1 HERB C I GS Professor Herb Cummings, a painting instructor for the College oflfiite and Applied Arts. was chosen by the senior class as one of their favorite faculty nieinbers. SCRIAISIIAI1' interviewed Mr. Cummings to learn more about this popular prof Cummings attended Washington University 's Sclzool of Fine Arts as an undergraduate and received his Masters in Fine Arts from Indiana University in Bloomington, Indiana. In addition to teaching at SMU, Professor Cummings lzas also taught at Webster College. Washington University, Rhode Island Sclzool of Design ana' was a Clzief Critic in ljuropean Honors Program, spending I4 months in Italy. S: Professor Cummings, how do you feel about teaching? C: lt's important that you love teaching. lt gives one an opportunity to change someone's life, and hope they are are a better person. lt's worth it even if 5 out of 30 see what you are doing. S: How do you feel about the Fine Arts Department at SM U? C: SMU's Art Department is very good. All our kids are getting into graduate school. Kids here are just as good as RISD. Students coming here now choose SMU first, rather than U. Mass or Mass Art. Therefore the quality of students is better. In the Fine Arts Department at SMU, kids get an excellent liberal education. It is especially good because in the department we don't point out that the education one gets is for economic gain. Art is a way of life. Whatever job they get they can still paint. It is something one can pursue forever-Knowledge that can be carried with you always and directly applied. th gr V I W' I .3-ihwfi .i .Q S: What are your own personal thoughts and philosophies on art I' C: Merton says: Every tree gives honor and glory to God by just the way it 15.0 You have to find your own sainthood. You can't do it by imitating. You have to form to the forces that are working on you. ejust like the tree forms to the forces that are working on it. But there is a danger in teaching this and not justifying bigotry. People tkidsl should hate obligations to find themselves in the natural and good. Art is good. Things that are not artistic are lacking in truth. good. and beauty. The painter and sculptor are trying to find the eyelash of God: perfect-beauty. although he knows it is impossible: trying to find glimpses of perfection. ln a painting l can lose myseli. so it is a feeling as you were before you were born or after you died tor cosmic consciousnessl S: Hou' do .1-otthftftftutwttf the jittttre ofS.lll 'f' C: The only chance for a middle class family to get an education is in public education. Most of art comes out of the middle class. l think that SMU has great potential. l came here with the idea that SMU could be the best school on the East Coast. lf it can survive the financial squeeze. it will be okay. HO RD BRO Of faculty members at SMU it can be said that there are far too many professors and very few teachers. Howard Brown, associate professor of Management and chairman of the Management Department, is one of the latter. To many members of this year's graduating class he is one of the best. With a refreshing and unique style of teaching, and a flair for developing a sense of responsibility among his students, Dr. Brown lliowara' to many of his friends! is known as a real educator in the true sense of the word. Unlike many faculty members who are liked because of their' easy grading system, Dr. Brown 's popularity is surpassed only by his dedication to the educational process, That is why he received the most votes from this year's graduating class. In this interview Dr. discusses some possible reasons for his notoriety. B: I think it may have something to do with the fact that I don't give exams. I gixe the class a syllabus with an outline which states 'for a C you must ..., for a B you must .... and for an A...Basically you have to pick your own position, state what you want and defend it. My philosophy is there is a B and there is a HB . People can take charge ot' their own educationg I threaten them with that. I'in not taking charge of your learning experience-people have been nose lead and spoon fed for the past lo years... S: Has this approach worked, in your estirrzatiorzf B: It's hard to evaluate this sort of process...The responsibility lies ultimately on the student, total1y...There is a contract tbetween myself and the studentsl...I've been pushing the responsibility on the student. you're big kidsaf, S: What effect does the contract marking have on your students? B: Dealing with cases in business policy, administrative practices, personal management, all of these become very judgemental-not right or wrong issues. If you want to get something on this, challenge me, call me on it, is what I tell them. Either you're going to stand up and fight sometime, develop convictions...The person is going to have to get up some courage and have to stand up before the class. In the process the students evaluate themselves...Sometimes a student will ask how long a paper should be. Should it be typed? etc. Ild rather get five pages of something good than assigning a ten page paper and getting five pagesof garbage and five pages of the stuffl want. S: Has this been a problem? B: The biggest problem is the students' inability to write well. Some people see me as a frustrated English professor. I've been trying to get a handle on this problem. but English 101 and 102 had been the only required courses. Then we added until recently lillstrrcss loitiirrttttttalrotts ,ooisc lUl'L's'N Illt' Nllltlellls lit '.'.I5l ttt'csenl.ition. present it, .mtl tlt-I. :nl it -5- lllltll hllltl ffl ltttllttlrl-. lrltllt till: l.. 1 this tllljlfrhlt h ' li: Some sllldcltls come in .ind s.t5 I really got carried assay' with that . and tt xxoils' .ix-' ' INLIB OIICL' III Ll Wllllt' sttlllctiitt- is satlltik -sl - although it was tough. I eot stttticllitit-' ont ol' it. S5 llowarcl, just In t-ltungt' the lout' or this iittcrrietr a little. multi we tall about your llll'Ull'L'llIt'l1I lI'l'lll .sI1ltlt'l1l.x. null ffltlsltlt 'rom' role as a proje.s'.sor'. B: Well. outside ol' class. in my adxisory role I see quite a lew students...l looked gil nip calendar lor the 70-77 academic year and counted over 175 appointments. and that doesnlt include the number ol' students l'xe seen outside the otliec r... l'vc enjoyed t-.iorlsing the resident assistants during a training session and once had the privilege ot' speaking to a group ot' dorm students during one ol' their evening sessions. Those experiences. along with encounter with a number ot students in an Osgood Hill conference. have been quite rewarding. S: Do you hare Llllhl' j7l'Uf7lL'lll.S' gclthte along with SIIICJUIIIS? B: ltis funny 'cause most ol' ing' students are either seniors or graduate students and part ot my thing has been an inl'ortnality. lIotxartl's the name. not Dr. I have a role. but respect has to be earncd...some students hate .i problem with calling me by nts lirst namt '... I guess the role dictates my nature. it says be easy on him . but Sl0.000.00 and 3 more years of college comtnands respectf' lucxpletive deletedlut. Anyone IVNIHS lf' teach a course without going Oltl and xxorlting in the 'real world' can do something in a theoretical way. however. alter working out there for I5 years. I beliere l'xe brought a realistic outlook to the -iob. 1 4 5 6 tj ff 'fx , skit 'Uljl-1 1'wY,y f 1 Q in 'pc , JL ffwav gf A. nuff-'-swf, 1, w is Thu K A 1 pi' .1 'f sz I . 5 v' jx e Y A ,ff ' . 'Q s sh , , P list ' , f ' f 1, ' 5- v .. . lf E U' ' 5- ff ' 1... , V , N, 'IW 9 S' fi!-A 7Af 'f'wk E is-as H' P MANUEL WTINYP FERNANDEZ Whenever tlze name Tiny is mentioned on this campus one person comes to mind. Tlze name is in no way a description of this young man who, aside from his many contributions to student governnzent, stands a modest 6 feet 3 inches tall. Many call lzim controversial, others label him with some pleasant and some not-so-pleasant attributes. But there is no question as to tlze respect and reverence many fellow students and staff members lzold for T iny. Among lzis many accomplishments are lzis presence on tlze following student Organizations: President, Black Student Union H973-752: Justice, SMU University Court H974-761: Member, SMU Affirmative Action Committee H974-77l.' Chairman, College Now Advisory Board V75-'76l,' Student Senator V73-'74, '75-'77!,' Member, SMU Board of Governors V75-'77l,' Vice President, Student Senate V76-'77l.' and he now holds tlze highest ranking student government position, President of tlze Student Senate. In an interview with Scrimshaw, Tiny spoke on some of tlze concerns he has as both a student and a Black man on this campus. He has added a valuable dimension to this publication. ut, s. S: Why didyou Come to SMU? TF: After graduating from high school in l97l I went to a Junior College and didn't last more than a semester and a half. then quit. My high school background was deficient-I began working-it didn't amount to much. I started working within the low income com- munity. mostly with black folks in the Youth Resources Bureau of Brockton. It wasn't enough so I decided to go to SMU to hope- fully work in social work. Then through some prodding of friends I became involved in stu- dent government. I was still not ready for a serious encounter with education...coming from an urban setting to SMU which is pre- dominantly white institution which was. and still is. inherently racist. The decision wasn't a great one. SMU was new. and if I was to go to a white institution. why not go to one which was relatively young and presumably open to change. Everyone comes to a point in life where he asks himself What is my destiny in life? I saw mnyself working at short range projects-and I wanted something else-I needed some professional training. I realize that. this being a capitalistic society. the things I was working on within my commu- nity seemed to go but so far. I had a naive view as to the effectiveness of my approach. S .' What is your major concern in life? TF: My major concern in life is with Black people-African people-I realize that all my involvement in student affairs has given me much knowledge and insight. I'm very com- mitted to the total liberation of all oppressed people. I want to contribute to the struggle. but not as a politician. After graduate school 4. -x.' 'Tr ,- I 5 '4 I xv-TT. TQ ,i',:.,5 ' V ,x . 1 J - it d , , A I-iv f I'd like to work as a student services adminis- trator. Most Black students are not suffi- ciently prepared to confront the racism and challenges inherent in a Lniverstty. l feel my talents could be utilized to their greatest potential in such a field. My major concern within this institution is students. all students. There are others around here who are Machiavellians. not really concerned with slu- dent interests. Most students care very little about student government. or student politics. per se. they're very complacent. There doesn't exist in student government a philosophy that would give student representatives something to work from. a goal to work towards. There needs to be a vehicle to effect change. one which will in turn educate students as to the political machinery of this Lniversity. S: How inzporlcml is lil m pnl1'11ic'l':v ,tlmlcnls in S M lf? TF: Well. Massachusetts is a political state and we are a state institution. which is politi- cally controlled. my fellow students feel that student representatives tor student leaders as some call them. huhli do nothing but play silly political games. Yes. this is true in some instances-some people are embroiled in politi- cal bull shit. but there are some of tis who are constantly involved with the state political system. that is the politics you play to get money for the library. the Keep SML' Inde- pendent campaign. lobbying for other SNIL' interests. and so on. But just within the I ni- versity. you must get involved with the trian- gular system. the student-faculty -administra- tion triangle. The fight for student interests alone is an onerous struggle which must be carried on day in and day out. constantly. Students should be in the forefront. The Spe- cial Student issue which the Vets Club was very much involved in, is a prime example of what concerned. organized students can accomplish...Now it's the library deficiency: SMU's accreditation: Bucks for Books...for some reason some students don't have the ini- tiative. because if they cared about the future of SMU they would be pushing constantly... People take the attitude that it's not their problem, or That's thejob of the elected offi- cialsf' S: How do you feel about that? Isn't that your job as a student rep? TF: No, It's more than that. When a student is elected to any position on this campus or any campus it is his responsibility to articulate the views of his constituents. That means that the rep is to go back to his constituency and give his position on certain issues, then get their input before he returns to the elected body. Itis a two-pronged responsibility. The student rep should be more responsive to the student body, they are the ones who vote him or her in and they should be sure that those whom they elect operate in their best interests...by addressing those issues affecting the well being of the total student populus... S: As a Black man how do you see the Black community in terms of the future of this University? TF: Contrary to popular belief. I see a real change in the forseeable future. probably in the next year: not only within the Black stu- dent community. but in the Black community as a whole...In the past the major concern of the Black community here was their status-as a social community, academically, culturally. l see the thrust now towards the incoming group of students-that is. not neglecting the current inequities-getting ajump on the prob- lems and challenges that Black students have relative to their participation in a predomi- nantly white institution. As such. however, the ultimate concerns should be with academic excellence. cultural enrichment, and a student should be equipped for a serious encounter with waive 1.1 white majority educational it ' 'X negating the fact that Q nfrstwiiity notkiust to SilV!Llf'g'1 - .N . Qilftijii SitlClSl1fS of it. '11-1Lf'Q44fgq to develop an afiizii . I-pm also be sincerely con-rest: Equal Opportunity...So f Black people will achieve - campus is if they initiate it them. QQ. A 7 1Y' PETER TOUSIO Known to rnany of his friends on campus as the Rock , Peter I 'UlUIl.S'lU1l is tl 1111111111- individual in his own right. His warmth and kiizdncss. co11plccl with his tlerotioii to llilt year's senior class as President of the Class of 1977, malre him a prinie c'c111clicla1cjort1 spot in this year's yearbook. Peter is a native of 1'l.l'C1lllllS, llilczssx Ile nzajoretl lll li11si11ess Management with a particular interest in Psychology. people and public l'C'll1llUIl.S. llc 4-t1111e to us frorn Greece linclirectlyj via Springfield, lIflClSSClC'llll.S'C'fl.S'. When uskecl it-ltr' he rlmse SMU, this is what he had to say: PV: Being from Springfield, U-Mass Amherst was close but I wanted to go to a small University where a student has the opportunity of being a Peter Vatousiou or a John Brown, an individual as opposed to a numberg lost in the shuffle... When I was in High School I was on the football team. I was a regular jock...l needed to learn how to study and apply myself, and I feel I've benefitted by having to learn to be my own person-being away from home...You have to be able to make your own decisions, handle your own affairs. fiances, etc...I strongly recommend that a student should be on his own. As a famous philosopher once said. l'It is better to have lived and learned, than never to have lived at allf' S: Pete, tell me a little about the Presidency, what made you run, etc. PV: The reason I ran for President tot the class of ,77J, was to get people involved...The first two or three years here I got a feeling of apathy. I didnlt didn't care orjust weren't informed...I took the person to person approach while in office. I felt that since it was my last year I should do something for both the class and myself-a form of accomplishment. ..I decided to get involved outside of the aC8de111iCS...Wlien you get out into the real world, involvement is what's QOIHZ-S T0 RCS? YOU sane or drive you crazy, depending on what you're involved in... S: How do you feel about SMUI' PV: It's similar to the United States. on a small scale. lt's somewhat ol' a melting potg people from dil'l'erent parts of the country. or the world. Each person has an equal opportunity to get involved in the University and be successful. academically. Some students from other countries may have language difficulties. but if were in this togetherg if people are willing to work with other...By encouraging each other both academically and socially, we can make their college education that inueh more fiilfillino-eeneeiallv when they get out like the country club atmosphere we have here. Sf lj'.t'o11 luul .so1t1eIl11'11,e In sur lu the L'111i'e1'.sl1,1'. in f7llI'lllI,U. Itlltll it-o11l,l you sur to .S'.Ill'.' llltll IAN. Slll the people. lllc' lelwiile, 41111411 le, lu'-ilu, joocl. cle. PV: I never really thought ot tl like that. Vl hen I think ol SMI ...Il depends on hott I look .il it...I separate its LIIIIIACITIII .ispeets-1l.e Lldlninislralors ligne Ireen ters In-Ii IIII to me and other students. and I hope that other students hate heen ahle to lalse advantage ol' the Student lite Olliees and uhat the Ilean ol' Students has to ol'l'er. 'Ilhe professors and administrators. whether students realize it or not. are here to help the students... without students there wouldn't he any need for them. I just urge the laeulty members and administrators to make students anare ol' what laeilities are available to them... I PAUL cGINN Eitzfrifzg his four years at SMU Paul McGinn has been, to my the Feast. quite an active student. In this respect he has fwesf fmceptioriai. Aside from holding the distinction of being soie student representative on the Board of Trustees, he Fics devoted an enormous amount of his spare time to serving he interests of the entire student body. Among his many Mrs the inzpressive fist of committees and organizations - has served: Resident Halls Congressg I t ,Academic Affairsg Student Senateq TQ???'5e, two years as Resident Assistant and f his senior year: Massachusetts Student g 'wats Committee for both Director of 3 , Us ' 'riversitum' Safety and Securityg SMU Pres: 4 Budget Review Boardg and on nunze, t Fifi Board of Trustees. As a student, M. 's.' .'fFii?c'bX' impressive, and at SMU he has bt . 772.052 than the rule. .jf Wlzat kinds of C'llCIllgC'.S' liare .ron gone tlzronglz as a student lierej' ,Intl wlzy tlze impressive list of actiritiesj' M: When I first started at SMU, being a Jacques Cousteau fan, I decided to become a Bio major and later realized that too much of my time was either spent in class or in labs...sometimes 30 hours a week. But being a political science major gave me mueh more time for myself...there are no Iabs...so the rest was involvement time. I became involved in the Student Senate and later in the Dorm Congress. As Senate Treasurer my attitude began to falter and I felt like giving up as far as student governtnent was concerned. There were times when I felt at a loss when I saw kids going to the Rat or to the gym, but I guess involvement is the kind of thing you learn. It becomes a part of you. I donlt regret anything I've done. S: Wlzat do you mean? You dont regret doing what yoa've gotten oat ofit? M: To me the university's a give and take situation. You get an education and you should return somethinggto it. I've gotten a hell of a lot out ofit. It's taught me a lot about priorities in life. In the long run, it works out. S: How about your experiences as a Resident Assistant? Have you had any problems being a student - administra- tor? M: Working in the dorms...it's a job. You become a part of the 'systemi As an RA you are responsible for IOO students and as a Head Resident, you're sometimes responsible for the entire complex. live been a student advocate and also a part of the 'systemf I'm sure some students dislike me because of my title, but lim sure that some respect me. S II'l1.1l tlo to1rn.'t.1n lit tmv1r.1,'l.tns Nl. II5 llllsllallttlls I nt tallsing' IIHIII .t SILILICIII Lltlutegtle ptttiil tt! New .tntl ,is one who xsottltl etteotttage more student pat'tietpaliott. Sotneltntes I ' Q Iecl as though I nt xsotlstng alone on certain issues which I Ieel are preltx important and alleet its all, SJ llou' clo toll feel tllltllll lllt' .Qt'lIt'I'tIl LlllllllLlL'S UIIIIIIIAQSI SlllClt'lllN, t'.XfIt'l'ltIlll' with regard to getting it1i'olretl.' M: Sotne would use the apt tcrttt apathetic. I feel tltat most people are driven by their own sell' interests. There's nothing wrong with that. they 5' lg'1,.,, H1111 just have to break away from that and see themselves in a larger t't-ttntewm-tt. lt's the person who says 'you ean't do anything about it' and goes to the Rat to have a beer that discourages inc. To me there are three types ol' students here: those who care and know what to do about it, those who care and are too lazy to do anything about it. and those who are too lazy to know what to care about. lt's the last two tltat frustrate me, especially the third. They are denying themselves the opportunity to get what the University's all about. They're hurting the University and there are probably many students out there who would be willing to get something out ol' this University. S fl.. . H1,,' It III' Nl 'Nly -.1-it--.ti tt.. 1 -I .11 I tx'll.IIlI -'o.tlt .ttttl I lI.::- I stttttexsltele xsttlt llttttt htlti tt I cUIlll1IIl.tl'lt' .tltttttl lltt' xs.t's it It Iltll xottl :'o.tls Int totttt-ttt.tII I lllk'Ill. Illicit xttttte tltntlttt stllt t I llltlt s I ttlltttt .tlttttttttl I syslen - -' , ' Illlsllaltttll Nutt ltakt' I-I deal sstllt it I lll.tI s .t pall ol lllt' NIIII lt.twt I vt il ut xott tant In I against tl. It I xotttsell tlovtn tot not ttieitott in t' the lruslr.tltons. lil ton tomttltv in .lil n Nllltfilll lulruxxtxs lflltllllul I r tl ' NI: Its nnportanl lot peoplt it I honest xstth tltents tlxes tl llttxt honest vtttlt tltentselxcs lltu I IHIXDIILIIWIX ln' IIUIICNI tltat I mean completely I xstllt itll tts II IUIIL Paul McGinn being sworn in as Student Trustee by Governor Michael Duls tl- ts PROFILE Steve McGrath BUG Thinking back on 1976-1977, I would say that the best moments this year were the allocation of S52,000 surplus as a result of the state takeover of the maintenance Account, says Board of Governors Chairman Steve McGrath. I feel they made a very wise decision as far as the allocation of Sl0,000 for a concert for Spring Weekend, with all the proceeds going for the Bucks for Books campaign. The remainder will go into the capital outlay budge-t for improvement and expansion? As far as the most trying moments we've had on the boardf' chimed in Vice-Chairman Pete Blunsden, Hit was the general feeling of the Board of Governors that the Sunset Room was a good project, but was losing money. If the room was to be kept open, it would have to be subsidized by both administration and students. McGrath reminisced. The loss on the room was just too great to justify its staying open. I just hopef' said McGrath, that the capital outlay plan as voted by the BOG will improve the Campus Center atmosphere, both visually and aesthet- icallyf' Ron Desrosiers WUSM October 1974 saw the birth of WUSM 90.5 FM lmonoj. a fledgling 10 watt station that almost didn 't get off the ground. Over the years welve seen WUS M grow and mature. September l To was another such featg it was at this time that WUS M went stereo. The honor of hitting the stereo switch was performed by General Manager Ron Magnant, but the work and sweat was the effort of many. WUSM thanks Mike Bucko, Bill Bylund. Ron Magnant. Bob Randall. Joe Toomer. Bob Shea and numerous other station managers. In an interview conducted by S C RIMSHA W writer Mike Laney. alias the Sundance Kid nl' W US M, General Manager Ron Magnant and Program Director Ron Desrosiers revealed .tonic of their sentiments and reflections of their pastyears with WUS M. S: Ron, what was the most memorable event in 1 976-7 7 for you as General Manager? M: Well. Sundance. the building of the new studio. all the waiting and finally going stereo in September was a nice feeling. Another first was the remote telecast of the SMU hockey and basketball games. Our Educational pro- gramming under you. Mike. grew: we did the Referendum Questions: Showdown with Sun- dance. the Bottle Bill. Flat Rates for Electric- ity. State takeover of the Utilities. Gun Con- trol. Our membership has tripled since last year. We have people helping in all phases. Our quality of programrning is now much more diversified since we went stereo. Going stereo interested a lot of people and now peo- ple are more willing to get involved. They spend more time getting their shows together. Also. we now have special program ming stich as the Jazz Spectrum tlvlike Tvloranl. llowiirtl Glasser's Chelidehs' Classical tl,eo Kcnnyl. the Sundance Kid Alternative 'lakes Show. and the Easy Listening Show tfiary Ktirtisi. S: As Program Dirct'1ar Ron. what t'lian,Qt's ltaveyou seen occur in ll1t'xlt111'm1. D: l found that instead ofgiust cotning on the air and spinning some discs. people are get- ting a little more professional. their talking is better. there is less dead air. better tid libs. and 'tighter cueingf Going from mono to stereo is like day and night. The place is totally different. lt was like going professional. but the only difference was locale. 45- I SEN TOR EDWARD .KENNEDY Senator Edward M. Kennedy visited SMU in October during his 1976 re-election campaign. Kennedy voiced his concern on what effect Watergate would have on young people,s involvement in politics in l977.'He said he hoped that young people would become involved despite Watergate. Current issues with which Kennedy dealt included the Internal Revenue Code, the nation's economy and unemployment. Before closing, Kennedy endorsed Jimmy Carter as a presidential candidate, feeling that: f'Under Carter the working government will have a better chance to deal with the issues and that he offers the best hope for restoration of the economyf' Ni 34 A . -Vyaeafigg ' 43. . ,,, WE .- 2' W .Wu -my 5 WARRE FARRELL Co-sponsored by the Lecture Series and the SMU Womenls Center, author of The Liberated Man, Warren Farrell, addressed an SMU audience in January of 1977. Mr. Farrell's lecture avoided any hype on the book itself, and he presented the 'consciousness-raising' theme through a number of entertaining and revealing mediums. Besides a question and answer exchange, a role reversal experiment was done to give both sexes a chance to experience the different personality traits evolving from active and passive roles. By far however, the most popular portion of the show was the Man's beauty contest Ccalled Boy America Beauty Contestnj. Mr. Farrell's appearance at SMU proved to be most interesting and unusual and needless to say quite enjoyable for all. STOKELY CAR ICHAEL wfwu Civil Rights leader Stokely Carmichael was the guest speaker sponsored by the Lecture Series in February of 1977. Carmichael spoke on topics including revolution and Pan Africanism. He advocated Pan-Africanism, and the total liberation of Africa under scientific socialismf Other topics covered by Carmichael were the struggle between Africans and White men throughout history and the role of education in society. Carmichael said the ultimate purpose of higher education should be to 'sserve humanity. 'AYP-ft' -as I 1' if 11 vi Su . .1 , u .aff-, 6. Q D 0. O 'f' ' tx N 1 3 s x T i- I 'i .99 - 4 s f A s 1x q .N N Hx! A-M. -he 2 'iw - vires -. ' -lif'i: if-IFS zsi dzg F X 'r X x Q 1.0 . DQ, W ,, '.-A.. .E , A, N , P V fav, Q'-,l-XKXQ :Sli - -4 x'r A'f ' 'ff as Ju- fx' xx N an ' :1x,m-4 ., v2.9g3qQa1,',4- f 4,5 . -.' E-15553 'Q 11 V -2- '-'sigtli Q ' :L--.5 x , iii'-1:??PlQ-2 M 1 1122 , EF- 'gg ,. 'f iiisgizggs-1 iq- -2 f, . - - sq,g.:. gr- 1 ge5i-2.iHi-AFS-f-QV.-: Q .1 gfv.1gisg355,-Q: -La'-,QQ Q T iff L-r,,lr '.k4Q',-a A SQ. filk N is X fi: -RQ-Ha Q-3'-f -- :sM?fYFf'a2?' 41 N Sfi Kathy Cabral gifs- Bill Beglcy Barry Smith and Bill Bcglcy V Barry Smith and Helen Marie Booth SWEET BIRD 'Q Susan Sessier v 5,1 Q'-v 'Un-. ' 'JM ' -4-.4 41-4 ' :LL J v. -. - . 1 '- H s: . . Q m .' .-f. '-'n-' . -4 -f A 5 .1 --f, X 1 vRf ' 31-- s 'K . n .- o o I i i 1 1 I ' , w , ,. '- . JJ- N f v 'vm . ' 1 Q- ,, -.v . nu' . f-D -I., my-dv fr. ...Li Iii if J ' ' --.- N 1 f wi 'F 1 T '11 X N'S BASKETB LL Although the Corsair basketball team managed only an ll-12 final slate for the 1976-77 season, there were hopeful signs. First, it was a rebuilding year, and the future nucleus of freshmen improved dramatically towards the end of the campaign. Secondly, the Corsairs boasted a decent ll-8 record going into the final four games of the season, but found they had saved the toughest opposition for last. Coach Bruce 'Wheels' Wheeler must have felt he was on some kind of yo-yo, the way the season had its ups and downs. After hovering around the .500 plateau for much of the year, the Corsairs found themselves with a 6-7 record- on February 2. Four straight victories, including consecutive two-point thrillers over Curry and Fitchburg, followed, and the record was 10-7. An embarrassing los-s to Framingham was next, and then another win gave the Corsairs an ll-8 record and a good shot at post-season play with four games to go. lt was not to be, however. Not by a long shot. Rhode Island College was first, and SMU found themselves the victims of some very questionable timekeeping on RlC's home-court, losing 67-65. In the next three battles, the Corsairs found themselves pitted against, in order: the number one Division III team in New England, one of the two teams to beat the number one Division III team all year, and a Division Il squad with a schedule that included Notre Dame. So much for a .500 season. There were definitely good times, let us not be misled, however. Most of those highlights were supplied by the two-some of Doug Crabtree and Mark Champagne, although there were exceptions. Like Mark lXl,acLe-odls 25 point-12 rebound performance against Nichols. Mainly, however, it came down to the two g ' 1' o-captain Crabtree and junior Champagne led this team. Let there be no doubt. The two tied 21: in scoring. Champagne led the team in assists, and tied for the lead Cwith Len Brophyl in 'firffi- was second in rebounds talthough only 6'2 J and in steals. Beyond the statistics, were the. inspirational leaders: Crabtree quietly, with intense 110076 effort, Chamiwgruf gg five, and always there when the points were needed, always ready to congratulate or chastrse a ai.,-5,4 M 1 the situation required. . With Only wig seniors tCrabtree, MacLeod, and Keith Micelij the future looks promising. Fine size in the in 6'8 , 6'5,', 6'5',J and a hot-shot transfer ready for next year C6'3 Jon Johansen, look out r M.--alll. may make the return to a New England power a good possibility in the next couple of year, ,I , 'Si nl iv W f,IfP' ' C R l?'- D Q y 9 Doug Cl'Zll7Il'CC :gp 1 O . ,.,... l,..' -QI Q ' '0- ' 0 VIII. 1 'fffiiiiiz 5792? sl f 5' ' ' ,Q Hi - Q 1 sf If QQ! I 4 1 Q f :MQ , ' ' L L Ein get L . ' ' uk 3 km Y Vg' gf 5 ek rf ' ax Q .i.,:, 1' Aff .g . am-+L ' ' f' ' ' - L it 2, 1U , V! H .. Q 4 fr V - .N , YK 1 N A , r h bl 1 , Q. 7 f iii? 53 -Ax ' X 4' 13 J Q- 4' ly A ' j ' fr K Y if , if , 52 , dv Ffrf'-1 l : ' 'N t : V 4 n - 'rr 3 , . f '12, ' ' silk I 1 C . A . .IH , Mark MacLeod I .1 x , , 3 1f1sSl,g:snL-'iii Kcilh N iccli l'l1nlm lay liill Uillllfiglll N95 BASKETB LL 90' ,Q 'ix I X b . if What could have been an up and down season for the Lady Corsair Basketball Team turned out to be a winning one. Nine wins and five losses was the record set by the team. Led by senior tri-captain Pat Gallagher, junior Dale Dawicki and sophomore Mary McCarthy the girls went out and played with determination and some original moves that will be remembered for the 1976-77 season. j Their zone defense was noted by opposing coaches one of the determining factors in many of the wins this season. Brown University was one of the teams stunned by the 2-3 zone. only four Brown players scored against SMU. The high scorer for the Lady Corsairs this year was Mary McCarthy. Mary, a sophomore guard, could be everywhere at once it seemed. She has a mean jumper, a great behind the back dribble, and she stole the ball so many time most opponents came down the court expecting her to be there. Top rebounder Marilyn Caswell always seemed to be overlooking everything. A 6'l it junior center, she could be found in the thick of things most of the time. Outstanding freshmen Sally Darlington and Ellen O'Rourke helped the team in every aspect, especially when it came to the l-2-l-l press. Ellen could always be seen making an aggressive move to steal the ball. Sally had some great baseline moves, moving to the basket for a smooth lay-up. Another outstanding player was Mary-Beth Hill. A 5l2 sophomore guard, she had her own jump shot that she hit from almost any place 20-25 feet from the hoop. The team went to the Massachusetts Association of Intercollegiate Athletics for Women Basketball Championships Division 3, at Bentley College. There were eight teams and SMU was seeded sixth. The girls played a tough leiarvard-Radcliffe team and lost. Harvard-Radcliffe went on to win the tournament. veg X. 3 . fb? 'right - . ' -r Negra ff: f' I ' ' , . if . Photos bv Bill Gathright X '-' 7 lsr: HO KEY Standing alone in the tiease with three seeonds lelt in the season's finale with Westfield, SMU3 senior eo-eaptain Riehie Ahern got the puelx and tired the shot that so often lound the net in his brilliant lioekey eareer Westfield's goalie lunged to his right and turned the drixe away with his pads into an empty corner as the buzzer sounded ending the game and the season lt was one of the many frustrating events that typified a frustrating season for the ieemen. After running up a 5-2 first semester mark. the Corsairs fizzeled out down the streteli dropping IO of I3 eontests The season was not without its highlights. however. Ahern finished his eareer with an exen 100 points -- leaving him SN1L s greatest seorer ever. Ahern's linemates. eenter l-rie O'Berg and rightwinger Nlike Horne. both seniors. lease SWL' with some fond memories. O'Berg's nifty passes and llorne's flying body eheeks will he missed as well as the aerohaties of Patil Tug LeBlanc in the t'orsair erease. Things look hright for the Corsairs though. in l'l'h. lil oi the 23 starters will return ..-.. .14-...-u-...-.--pw Men's Fencing l976-77 will be remembered in SMU fencing as a year of close camaraderie, strong individual efforts and a lot of spirit. Under the leadership of senior co-captains Grant Colley tSabreJ and Mike Laney CEpeeJ the teamas proficiency and spirits rose. Seniors leading the cheering section like Dave Fontaine tThe White Knightj Mike Laney, set the mood for SMU,s merry band of swordsmen. The season held many joys and disappointments for Coaches Eugene Williams and Ralph Tykoki as the Corsairs garnered a 4-7 record. Senior Grant Colley distinguished himself as he finished 5th in New England. Next year's returns hold much promise. 1, -.A. - - - P1'Uun.i.:.s 4 V- -- f1.L.!F f4,,7 in ef-if '- '- n.'- ' ' , x lr 'f e . t I at-ff X-at the-+ f omen's Fencing Although the record may show that the SMU Women's Fencing Team had ti bad season C2-85, the numbers cannot truly tell the whole story. The female Corsairs under Coach Bob Gttrney's direction laced some ot' their most grueling competition in seasong also 90? of the team as composed ot' rookies. Junior co-captains Jane Gffringa and Jo-Ellen Casey can look forward to a lw etter year in 1978 as their newly accrued talent returns. The highlight of the 1976-77 season was SMU's stunning upset other Holy Cross I5-I. It will be remembered that the SMU Women's Fencing team got that match ott' to an excellent start as they fought almost flawlessly, dropping only l point in lo times at the mat. Q17 5 .rw ui? if Men's Swimmin Mediocrity, like beauty and humor, is a relative proposition. The Corsair swimmers splashed their way to a 5-5 record in 1977 - - mediocre by many standards. Actually, it was the best performance by the aquamen ever! With squeakers over Brandies, Nichols, and Keene Stateg and big wins over 'Holy Cross and Lowell, the aquamen easily out did last year's l-7 mark. Dave Olson led a squad of young and eager swimmers with ahandful of new records. The shy sophomore SMU history with a sparkling l0th place finish in the collegiate New Englands in the NG yard freestyle event. left Banner and Ed Feeley, two newcomers provided continual excitement. Danner was 2'-fu out front in the sprint events while Feeley made his mark in the middle - i iost some weight over the summer and promptly lost valuable seconds from as he churned to a new school record. Ron Wilson kept the Corsairs in many a meet with their springboard .. tg, rirosh, flipped and spun his way to a three meter record in the iioiy il, f, li- 45 ann Barret gave the young swimmers something to believe in. Themselves, VET'S CLU Q SHU On Friday February 18, 1977 the SMU Vet's Club presented a Mardi Gras Boogie and Bash featuring the Rhythm and Blues Band. An added attraction to the Boogie 8L Bash was a Gong Show where all of SMU's frustrated performers could let loose Seen above, Vet's Club president Brad Burns fizzled on stage while impersonating a piece of bacon frying in a pan Crooner Norman Perry Crightj sounded smoother accompanied by the melodic voices of Vicki and Ellen M. B 1 'HM I O' 'X U' 5 5 .,x 0 t fx, .gg i-an T-as i' , .- A Q A vida . --- , 'Q I Q 4 ' . E K ., x .,s ., u eq ' 5 iii . x. Q , s. V' . :A ' fi in 2- 1 A 1 Q, -- .7 4 X -as-..d- Beginning in 1972 with the Broadway musical Ciodspell. tlie Concert Series has presented many of the most popular contemporary recording artists. 'llie lfV5fr- scliiliil year featured performances by the National Lampoon Co.. Bob Dylan loan Baez gintl ilic Rolling Thunder Review, Tavares, Aztec Two-Step, Lonnie Listen Snntli. Brass Construction and Loggins and Messina. Numerous other smaller attractions were pi-est-iiieil in the Friday night mixers in the Campus Center. The 1976-77 Concert Series was put at a disadvantage because ol' tlie sulistantigil lots on the Loggins 84 Messina Concert. However, the Concert Series did produce Iwo sliows tlurine the Fall semester: A Clean Living concert and a Concert Series Night On Tlie 'liw.ii mixer which were great successes. . KW, . A gg Emi, 1 ' , jf G1w',- 4 --ZA - .1 .Q ...J M' wislz you a fllerry Clzrisfnzas and a llappy New Year! spring 1 . gi w,,,,,y,.,, ,Ib lulwl for Spring U vl'l'lil'IIlI 5 N me 5 ., RW Tram fearzmed pzmfmmimist at the 1 of Spying Weekend, Effie: ' 59 The Battle of the Bands X SPRL QL N' 'EEKE D 'NX--A gf I '-.N ff E ,Hi .V 5 A8 5 A ,Q Sf f iw is X 4 if A i . 1 4? :.:v,,f' ' if A x Wg Q 4 'X 'Jig .Q if 'A 3-sq., 'V ' Q .X ' ' V 'H Y PHL Il B LL WT' ali w ...Sl U' k if 'Elw - , . 1 gate , . K ig ,. - Q4 N X ZORBA ZORBA A ZORBA Ve. MMM? Z A . ix I T? izlu E RB .f Q xx? if vi ZGRBA ZORB L,n, P. 1 7 -4 1 Q i 7, 5 I I 4.5 :IAA 4 I. ,A 1 ,b 1 iff ' . Y? ,g:1- 4 ' -A Q. -. . .1 ' 4-'J 5,02 , '.:':'e'4' Y ' 14.4 0 , 4 .f O 'H' elf. 0 ' v - ' .' - 51- 5 :L'.3v ' :'viA I ,.r'- 'I v Q - .. 'ff A I 'lv A, uh? A- ' , ,' A '1 q x .uf of ,? ', . , f F . ' fi' I GQ XT 'ft' 1. 5 I . V.. 9' 5 , 9 O ,Q 1 5 'fx' O if gfytlf' 'Q' epfsixg. X Jr T- x'v. '11, 1 5.4 v :am 'wfFi5'2 kn, ...aw 'ii f avril' ' ' sto by Bill Gathwright Back in early April the SMU baseball season was looked on with barely restrained excitement and undisguised optimism. And why not? The Corsairs boasted their strongest squad ever - a senior double- play combination at second and third, Joe Jason, an All-America second baseman, an outstanding group of junior transfer students, and a batch of new freshman talent. Those assets couple with the longest and one of the most competitive schedules in New England, had many observers conceeding New England's division three to SMU, even before the season had started. At season's end the Corsair batsmen had only a 2123 record to show for all the pre-season speculation Though eight of nine starters batted over .300 for the season and the Corsairs were still rated in the top ten it was a dismal season. In fact, it was Coach Bruce Wheeler's first taste of loosing in six seasons. What happened? Several key factors were responsible for the Corsairs inability to consistently win the big', game. To open the season, SMU traveled south to the Central New Jersey Baseball Classic where Coach Wheeler's squad hoped to begin impressively against some top division one clubs. It didnlt quite happen that way. The Corsairs came away from New Jersey with an 0-Q7 record, a hole they could never quite dig themselves out of . in addition to the bad start, SMU's pitching never shaped up as expected. While the Corsairs scored runs 20 more than enough, the pitching allowed just a few too many tallies. This made for a long season. 's 13354213 in crucial double-headers against division three clubs Salem State and Bridgewater, cost the ff e.f4.1:.:s1a'raie tournament bids. ' 5 Eesti.-!siixggi1'1g first baseman hit .380 and drove in 40 runs while leading the team in fum .. xsief' and John Gonsalves broke into the starting lineup. Seniors Jason Steve Tlibeik Lara ciosed out their SMU four-year careers with brilliance. b-m..u.. di, H 1 N I, 4 , v q , AGN..-, v-.. .grfg 'o 'r'j:fM1'l ' Y- x A ' I A P , rv . . - , . --. . ' ,, -' J j fJ ?:l:5...I ,'t V 5- . 33 V . uv? sl . :P Photo by Greg Garber V ASEB LL I I YGOWQ, .-1 .3 , W lf, ff! ,5ff,f37'.f f9'0p,,' 4 ' 1 f 4 A , , ,f ' r - . fm, ,,,-, 1-F1 1' .' - .' 1 . ax I ?27'a7:W XI7!77.t 'fffff 1-'xr o - . A . J' 1 Y .,.. ',.l... .: .- W . rdf'- 7-. 5 :WJ 1 .. .f ,., I , '. 1 ' ' TE 1 1 A .4-up-1191 ' ,Q - ' ' ' M. . A51 A -' 'B ,wi gf i - ' 515354.-'f , 4' x L' 'Er ' :yi L- .J V If 1 S -x t ' l I 4 Photo by Bill Gathwrigilt oe Jason at but -4' '4 Photo by Bill Gatiiwright TENN S MThe magic word is experience. The guys on the team could hit the ball as hard as anyone they played. but the tactics strategy and mental ability just wasn't always with them. Third year Varsity Tennis Coach Jak Beardsworth reflected the 1977 season. With four of the singles players being freshmen the much needed experience wasnlt part of the tennis team's game plan this year. The record was 4 wins. 5 losses and one tie. But the record doesn't show the close matches that the players had. Sophomore Captain Steve Charest played number one in singles. Steve didn't win all his matches but showed his reason for being the number one player consistently. Steve played ten matches this year, five of which he split sets and went to a deciding third. Steve also played number two doubles. The number two player Greg Hennemuth a freshman is a very emotional player. Greg won five of ten singles matches and voiced his feelings in the process keeping his matches exciting. The number three man, a junior, Brad Cheney had an identical record to Greg and played number one doubles with Steve Charest, Brad is the third year player on the team and has improved considerably this year. Seeded number four, another freshmen Bill Mercure, had the best win loss record on the team with six mins ann three losses. Que tive. George Desrochers also a freshman had a fair season. Four wins and five losses. George had if tition. Siiating ist fingies position Ken Nieva a freshman and Joe Hayes a returner, compiled a 3 3 and 4 2 record rests-5 There B N ' Utes. SMU won against Assumtion and Stonehill Si-4 yet lost by the same mllfilill to f' vvaticr. The only tie with Curry was a tie because of darkness. a strange occurence for :rs were two big losses and two big wins. The losses came against Brandeis 9-O and URl S-l. 'C 7--Z and ENC 9-O. The other loss was expected but the team gave their best effort at the .,.e.:rf State was one of the top powers in Division three tennis for the '77 season. Next year the 7l4XN'til1Ci to a better season with some veterans coming back to anchor the 'lC8.lll. .ml NVKIIX lx xlllll Ill IHRII Il'l lnNIiIQJ1XX1tr'xN1nllH MENS SPORTS BASEBALL BRUCE WHEELER - COACI1 ANTHONY ANDRADE - ASST. STEVE KNOWLES - ASST. BASKETBALL BRUCE WHEELER - COACH KEVIN DUNNE - ASST. ICE HOCKEY JOSEPH PRENDA - COACH JOHN NEGRI - ASST. SVHMMING JAMES FILIPPO - COACH TENNIS JAK BEARDSWORTH - COACH SOCCER JOHN BARRETT - COACH IVIANNY IVIATOS - ASST. TRACK BOB DOWD - COACH KEVIN DUNNE - ASST. CROSS COUNTRY BOB DOWD - COACH GOLF ' JQHN BARRETT -COACH INCXIQN-S IJIILIIIOIC Cl X I l.ll Ill S X Y-UNIl,N'S SPORT S lifXSKl'.'l BALI. JLIJN Sl l l IN XX -1 HV ll I LfNL'IfNCi ROB! Rl Ml RX! X -I HV I1 FILLIJ HOCKEY RRISTIQN S'l ARSLX - C UM Ii SOFTBALL NANCY l'ALTLliI'S - C'UM'll SVNININIIING JOAN MOLIIRINCL - QUMJI TENNIS JERZY KLPINSKI - C'O.'XC'll VOLLEYBALL NANCY PAULl1L7S - HJ,-XVII CHEERLEADERS DEINISL DLSROSIIARS - LINC ll P 'JVC , -r 1 ,- X ff. U .in ,qt 1 , . A n P ' ' ' . - . , .. u . . . , , Mx . ,J 1 U ' 'Q y ' K ' J.l,' A Y K v . , 'v 1 ' ' i I .4 I .Us - '7' ' -1 -v ,QR L, '3: ?'-:A '43 4 ' 75 J , , -s VJ- n-.- gi' -,Lilzfz H '- ' I - N2 w , JI Vo? ,. , . I A wflxxf. an ',-1-as . .flgfg wif 's ,, ,L 'ff-1 ?N'E'!,3., G5 F , x A .ai , Q54 ., , ,QW I. 14 . ., .V V .- -A 7: I ,-Wg,-'-47! - .u lj jg, 1 I '75 f E ,- X- I 9 vt. 5.4-4'-,, s 1 , A ls.. -N AJ. W .N 1' V wt, , -.. A, W' Q X L 4 1 V ww. . , f 'A WWXA V, -1.- . Q . ' - 1 ,ff V, 1. 1 . ,:.,-1-2 Qwfqef , fd gf , fl. Jfhh K. , . 1 Y ra f,Q '1 .li 1 -- 4 , , - ' ' -X v 5 T11-'lb' X' ' a.,,, '-. ..,, 'Y V 7.5 I A. - . . V1.1 M 4 -1 n T ' 6 I , I N, s X 5, s N 4 ,' ' . . ' r' , ff,- v ' H.. 12' .1 f . 7 'fi-ATT ':. 3 , X X . '. . w 'F fl . 4 f .5 1 x f ':. 3, , Af- w ' 'I 5 L , , N 1 x 5, f 41 I 4 ., ,H A 3 x' -L' ' I . Ju' I V 1 , ' L . 'Igj' I km . , 'F 1 , fx ,,,.. 9 W ,-l kc. , g.,,, vi f 3' ff y ,.'n x Q 1 , f s Y- TQ -. Q ,Hs .a, .Q If 1-1. ...', 5 nj, I -i O ,fm A ,,,, 9 ' - , 1 SENIURS We ,ve finally made it!!! RTS A D SCIENCES Anthony M. Adriano Donald Walter Allen, Jr. --fi Nancy Carol Alves L Clarisse C. Amaral Idalia M. Avmaral Ann Marie Ameen Nancy Claire Anderson Steven J. Arruda Kenneth Augostine lf I 4. 5. Ye Mina Loum' linuuclln Sharon Annu Bums Cynthia ,-Xnn Bmbcm Naomi Sylvia Barboza Patricia A. Barton .loam I- Joan E. Bavoux Nathaniel Miller Beale Deborah V. Belezos Normand Raymond Benoit Gizella Margaret Betak Bolanle C. Bolarinwa-Jagun Ql- E ,E 'bf V .: , ' 5 Us It o , '.' f, -1 X A f ':f., 411' ffnf fe' ,' . . '1 ,..., - . 'K --, - , .--Q ' . ,, - . ,,- . v' ' . ,,- f v .,,,,AM Y..-.. .b A ff' . ,- FLW, fa f x ,, , J, .f 1 nf . , ' g 1 A qgnv-rr' 'V .' .' 5.1:-.-. . f '- -..... X Nriex Helena Bolwroxxieekl Doreen Bodio Joyce Elizabeth Bigda Michelle Frances Boragine i Catherine Marie Borini Thomas Teri Maureen Boyd Arleen Linda Brevich David Brodeur Deborah Carol Brownell Michael Bucko Catherine E. Bums Cknllrin B dui: m C Gerald R. Caron Wendy Carson Deborah Iway Q 'aim W' ,hm , I Fw w Diane Christensen Mary Ellen Clarke Kathleen Joy Cloutier James Maurice Condon Marileial Conterno i IO I ' , fo io , X f C z 3 ,en ,V if ,fha J, ' ff' Ivf I 2 K 2 lJcolimi11l'.lJnRo 1 gy , . ., 51 2 Gmo M. Costa ,, ircgory L. C1 'L'l1Ll1l.l.f uh Beverly M. Dean Robert J. Decoste Sharlene M. wwf' iw Charles Donnelly Mark Milton Dolittle Mary Theresa Downing Anne Jacqueline Driscoll Vivian E. Duff John C. Edward '15 QM' Qf 1' I X 1 Brian Paul Iurrm Richard Farina Brenda Ann Farrell Janice M. Ferretti David L. Fontainrf 1... Anthony C. Ferreira, Jr. 'Y f . ,W A A A id' I Ann H. Fournier Mary Louise Francis Geraldine D. Frates David L. Freitas Verna W. Galvin Michael Joseph Gaudreau ti ..,,, a ,i X40 Mary Patricia Ciillcn Deborah Jayne Gomes Charlene Ann Grgmdmont Kathleen Gail Gregory CynthiaE. Grifiih Kathleen 5. Q21 Z? - Micliacl Lloyd Gublor Morris Paul Guilbcrt Lydia A. Guillicrmc William B. Gurney Lisa J. Hager Janice Grace Hagopian -X .,f1,m-3:1--N ., ,. . 'f : i5,:,,:,A . ' Milf' -. T iw? ?1: .vs 'S' 1' ' l lf- QT Gerard lf. Hgnlur Pamela K. llnll Margaret li. llnrding Douglas R. Hardwick Richard A. Harpel Deiter Lothar Wolfgang Harlem was W 3 E James Barney Hathaway III Leigh Haywood Elaine Ellen Hayes James Hazell Allan Hickey David Laurence Hoff Michael Rulwrl Home Raymond J. Iloutmun I Cyntllia .lean Huge-5 A Stephen John Hughes Janice Marie Hutch Jgi ivy? ' Christopher P. Jarvis Philip Jarvis Christine C. Kapopoulos Kamran Karbassiyoon X . A! 'Q ova. 5' I 'N' ..l: 0' 0 50 O 035009 ,fs ol 1 , .. env .'Q ool0,5'Q ' Scoll .-Xlldrcxx Ladd .',:.'o ,2'l:'.S,g3f::. 3 I I in I' Q1 n.,'..'0aovgg O: O. Michael Raymond Kirkwood , ,f ,' '. ,,',',vjL'.',3'.'33.',f:'.. Donna Lynn LJIL-1'riLn 1 , Q1 1 .oaoooo1og.,'2g.. 0. Q, A ,M A- ' loan 4001110 Wayne Richard La Brie .1 5 , Micllglcl Jcromc L.m x Claire Loretta Lassonde Julie Andrea Leen Robert T. Lennon Q Joseph Edward Lewis, Jr Leslie Louise Lipp Pauline Claire Levesque Rose A. Lobo Malia De Lurdes S. Lopes Nancy Marie Love Paul A. Lowlt, Jr. Michael Luongo Carol Ann Muccdo Nancy Jean Madeira David John Mahoney Rosemary A. Martin ' tual: 1 Ile Jeffrey D. Maronn Henri R. Masse Linda Marie Mattos Edward McCormick Steven A. McGrath Paul Omer McGinn4 4' lwncl Nl nn Nh N ,,,, H, l'I lllLIN llixnpll NlLxInllUN m mi Nancy R. Medieros Edward G. Mello Linda Marie Mitchell Richard Paul Morin Ellen M. Mullane 'T Na - f' Ek bm J ,,,. M. ff, l . A 1. 1- .' .v-. .K hs Gerald Francis Mullane ,ff g .1-fq1f,f, W H' 1 L: Vtgiq. :- Mary-Lou Mulrooney Susan Naftygiel vox ,V uiHl'llll Rmwll Nmuu Q. 'Y Amircy Ann NlCkk'l'NUl1 MLH1' ullc Cicurgullu 'Nmvif Robert Paul Nolan Anne-Marie Nyhan Paul Micha fr--' Chukwuemeka Onyenokporol Gail Anne Pacheco Thomas Raymond Packard Joan E. Padre noss Mariann Pallatroni Donna Marie Parker Q. 'IP Cr' 1 I1-1 'if ,u 45 -Un I ixllllx TUIIOIIIB ,IA l'vlurx IC Nl.u'1c l'ul1l Dana Petitjean Joni L. Piel .,. X -1 , ..,LlL15id x fg- Curtis Edmund Pollitt Susan M. Pontbriand Dianne Celeste Poulin Stephen Douglas Puliafico Kathryn Marie Pyne Richard Carl Rahrl 0 0 Y I ' . -A ari Jammu RLIICIQII x K I 1 xt! Susan li. Rchcllo N -woruh Luc Rcgan , X' 1 ' Q ,ff a Q, , QJL1, . f-if? , Qwwn ix . 7'W?:'f'?4Q' - ' '. ., Y, -'ffii -4' fi '4 ' 1 'W- f F-ff' M 3 Dal 5 Qjvf, ' ,gg ' 7 lilff. . I 8355 1 X ' a. I Dorothy Rhodes Veronica M. Robdau AITIILA Roge . af 'N-. 37 -fun, X-1 Q efl 1 rigzif - f Y - ' F' ,' of-In ,A-ix.. V ..LQ5-1?'. W . ,M me 5 Ana Maria Rocha 4 '53 1 v ' if X if i mm if ,A I, Y ,z 'rf .' fi - Q1 . Fradlque Alberto Rocha 'dig ' Daniel J. Rogers Joyce Ann Rogers Linda Sue Rogel Dana R. Rowe vt Lf., Anncmuric Mlm I ilOlUL'I1Lx Nl. S.1lXLldx .loan Mac Suroku Robin Elizabeth Sawler Craig M. Sawtelle Susan i. Se5iwiii'2efi 2 XXXEQ , .is J I ,gli 1 ff' l Ann Marie Shaker Sheila Theresa Sheehan John Silva ll Nancy Lynn Silva Robert Charles Smart Joanne LeMay Smith Q 'H Peter Robert Slllllll Scott Daxis Smith I-Qcnnctl, Stgunlt-5 Patricia Ann Sullivan Jack Sweeney Joanne 1 xi Nfw. z'is f RZ. ,Ky iv V f 2. Ns, l, ' xx M, , I lu, .4 'i f 45 I ig' 'sn vu ' ' '+--fs. . l...,-l l .ii -I 1 'SVG-Q ff? it . i A 2 x Maria Alice Tavares Judith Ann Tavares Victor lVl.B. Tavares 'ixvr K, . , A !,, . 1 . Q ' I Q 'tax' 1'- 2: 5 '. 2 3' .u'.0..'.'. ..Q.':.o.zz. n :a,:p,-j.o:Qaj.'L1l,f:0A R -I X L,:.zl.':O'j..y'LO.:. ':'.'. . ljlnflld I I C -' o 00aa'. l:.g'l'.l 100.1 0,...-Og, Q p.g I Diane Irene Thibodeau James Tingle Donna Nl. Yiwirm Juync View Ymwrw Elizabeth A. Ward 4 a E inda Joyce Wheelock I George C, 2' ,. W N'-X W Jeffrey D. Wilson Robert A. Yaffe Lester K. Yensan BIOLOGY Michael J. Agostino Peter W. Allberry Gary Jolm Alves Cynthia Ann Barbero Nathaniel Miller Beale Patricia A. Bednarz Barbara C. Best Gizella Margaret Betak Christopher F . Bonzek Donna Jean Clarke William P. Connor Nicki D. Davida Patricia Jean Drown Anthony C. Ferreira, Jr. Kenneth Gerard Gaudette CynthiaE. Griffin John E. Grygalonis Leigh Haywood Allan Hickey Robin Wallis Hill Mark A. Howland Daniel P. Laughlin Linda Ellen Lavallee Alfred Rene Lima Stephen James McCabe James J . McCarthy William David Menezes Kevin L. Mitchell Norma Elizabeth Morris Joseph Edward Nawazelski William A. Page Richard Carl Rahn Deborah Lee Regan Daniel J. Rogers Craig M. Sawtelle William Sierra Patricia Ann Sindt Robert Charles Smart Joanne LeMay Smith Peter Robert Smith David Solomon Harold P. Stevens MARINE BIOLOGY Donald Walter Allen, Jr. Eric Scott Arvedon Lois Jeanne Ayash Carolyn R. Barlow Barry E. Brooks Margaret Mary Caron Francis B. DelloRusso David Manuel DeMello Sharlene M. Dietzel Mark Milton Dolittle John Fernandes Thomas P. F erraro Anita M. Flanagan Thomas J. Fredette Deiter Lothar Wolfgang Hartmann James Robert Hilson, Jr. David Laurence Hoff Stephen John Huges Stephen John Hughes Justin F . Kuo Scott Andrew Ladd ' i' . -Xtwu... t. l Qlzilxtli i'-1-.dw..l-in.-mtl. izliriiard Paul Morin Phillip W. Niiiieslieiii. Jr. Alan Gerard Powers Kathryn Marie P5 ne Janice ln. Santos Joan D. Silipigni Rosylyn M. Smith John Joseph Sinolski Joanne V. Taddei Kevin Van Doren Donald H. Warner CHEMISTRY Beverly Bendiksen Clarence Bullock Gregory L. Cote Paul Esielionis Kathleen Gail Gregory Philip Alan J arvio Adaleke Oyedeji Jegede Kamran Karbassiyoon Alvin C. Lavoie Gerald Francis Mullane Andrea Louise Nixon Carl James Raleigh David Mark REgan Scott Davis Smith ECONOMICS Mark Allen Chace Mary Ellen Clarke Wayne Richard LaBrie Francis Joseph Medeiros Joel C. Nwankwo Stephen Douglas Puliafico David Paul Quilty George Michael Sullivan Robert A. Waddington ENGLISH Teresa Devore Andrade M. Goretti Balch Anne M. Beaulieu Raymond Berube Vincent John Berube Wendy Carson Judy L. Chace Frederick J. Chlebek, Jr. Grant Philip Colley Claudia Nicole Comstock Eileen Conlon Joanne Louise Corrieri Deolinda P. DaRosa John W. Denison, Jr. Gerard Lionel Desrochers Deborah Lou Duffy Robert Gordon Edison ll Rhonda Gail Friedland Mary Patricia Gillen Lydia A. Guilhern.e Robin Lee Hacking G. Willard King lil Donna Lynn Laferriere ' v' -, ll rf! A3 1,p sa'r- . 1 5 il I ' hw . James R. Longstreet Ill Lynn D. Manchester Arlene lf. Manville Paula Ann Marshall Audrey Theresa Martin hlllfllllll IL. lvlalllliesseli Catherine M. Mayer Dons Mello Margo Moore Susan Nattygiel William Russell Neagus Anne Marie Nelson Thomas Raymond Packard Jeffery M. Pickens Lucilia R. Pinto Curtis Edmund Pollitt Susan M. Pontbriand .lan Paul Prastek Charlene Frances Richard Wayne P. Robillard Paula Lorraine Roneka Dana R. Rowe Ellen D. Satterlield Susan I. Schwartz Steven C. Sharek James A. Silveira Miriam Jane Stiller Deborah Carol Stinson Debra Ann Texeira Nancy E. Willson FRENCH Suzette M. Almeida Carmen L. Aniadeo Clarisse C. Ainaral James Leo Arsenault Avis Radowsky Golu b Anna Graeia Maria De Lurdes S. Lopes Hugh R. Mefartney lll Rose-Marie Mercier Sheila Anne Murray Mareelle Georgette Nicolosi Susan G. Rebello Filoinena M. Salvador Patricia Ann Sullivan S ,,. ' PO RTUG U li S li Joao F. Aguiar ltlalia M. Amaral Mario Jorges Barbosa John P. Barcclonas John P. Barcelos Helena Thomas Cabral Alcides Tavares DaGraca Cecilia Marie Felix Anna-Paula Ferreira Isabel A. Jorge Carol Ann Macedo Mary Alice Janeiro Post Ana Maria Rocha Kathleen M. Rogers John A. Santos Maria Alice Tavares Rozaria Fatima Vieira GERMAN Donna Lee Astin Marileia Conterno Silverio Demelo SPANISH Margaret L. Clarke William James Cole Ann Monteiro Linda Marie Morais Sheila P. Orlowski Gladys V. Mijoba Rezendes Paul Rodriques Rosa Bela Sinioes Saltao Nancy L. Silva Janice E. Souza Lucia V. Williams HISTORY Steven J. Arruda Domingos P. Baptista Joyce Elizabeth Bigda Catherine Marie Borini Thomas L. Boudria fgsf at .-1 X was if 1 Michael Alan Bumpus Thomas Henry Cadieux Robert Camara Diane Christensenl Charles Robert Donnelly James J. Emard Wayne Gisherman Thomas E. Gomes William B. Gurney Richard A. Harpel Michael Robert Horne Helen Hussey Freedom Agim Iheme Richard J. Kuzniar Stephen John McCumber Mary-Lou Mulrooney Carl S. Norman Gail Elizabeth Pavao Robert Perry,Jr. Anne Marie Petit Fradique Alberto Rocha Alfred Roderick, Jr. Elide Rodriques Paula Haims Rubin Robin J. Shields Gordon J. Silva Peter Leary Szulik James Tingle David Earl Townsend David P. Treen Nancy Lee Davol Warren- Peter L. Wheelock HUMANITIES 1 SOCIAL SCIENCES Ernest Boas Ruth Cabana Patricia Theresa Cortes Sean G. Dooley Dorothy Silva Frade Mildred L. Hall James Hazell Robert M. Hellwege Mary Lousise Leon Pauline Claire Levesque Ligia L. Lima Elizabeth Sheehan Lindquist Dorothea F. Mello Robert Paul Nolan Helen L. Sullivan Janet Katherine Sunderland MATHEMATICS John C. Edward Brian Paul Faria Richard F arias Mark J. Feldman Arm Marie Ameen Joseph A. Barckett Joann Bates Francis L. Bonaparte Deborah May Catlow Diane M. Dunn Bruce Emmons Edson Walter D. Frederick James R. Goes Kathleen Grace Cynthia Jean Huges Susan Kivior Joy E. Martin Brian Scott McCarthy Michael Meredith Ronald Paul Parenteau Christine A. Regula Thomas E. Spaulding, Jr. MEDICAL TECHNOLOGY Joyce Anne Arruda Virginia S. Bailey Peter M. Belanger Marie Denise Colombo Louise M. Desrochers Meredith L. Lonngren Janice Ann Martin Joyce A. McLeod Monica Medeiros David J. Mello Cathy Ann Moore Chukwuemeka Godwin Onyenokpor Rachel Marie Paradis Patricia Ann Paton Thomas G. Rose Diane Elizabeth Skowera Gail Ann Wynn MULTIDISCIPLINARY STUDIES Naomi Sylvia Barboza Barbara E. Belanger Linda Jean Berriman Deborah Carol Brownell Margaret S. Burrows James Maurice Condon John Edward Cook Paula Lee Dorrance Brenda Ann Farrell Mary Louise Francis Edward Hill, Jr. Sally Leilani Jones Elizabeth Karam Francis Joseph Kiman, Jr. Denise A. Lagasse Linda Jean MacDonald Janet Louise Martin Rosemary A. Martin Eugene Randolph Oliver Alfred Arsene Riendeau, Jr. Anna Rogers Rocha Ralph E. Sandford, Jr. James Vincent Terrio, Jr. Diane Irene Thibodeau Dorene Francis Bodio Marie Louise Gagne Lorianne L. Mongeau George Stead Thomas John Shay PHILOSOPHY Jorge M. Cardoso Stephen D. Grossman Daniel J. Tschaen PHYSICS Philip A. Lamarre POLITICAL SCIENCE Peter Richard Barbieri Peter Rainer Bargende Mark Steven Beaton Donald G. Bellefeuille Jacqueline Boisselle Antonio C. Brito Claire Marie Butler Stephen Gilbert Butts Wayne Gary Cabral Sheila Mary Coffey Debra Ann Correia Raymond D. Costello Gerald J. Delisle Christine Marie DiGiacomo Paul V. Downey Jean Marie Eaton Kingsley Emmanuel Esedo Michael Joseph Gaudreau Deborah Medeiros Grenon James Barney Hathaway Ill Douglas Everett Hersey Jeffrey B. Janson Joseph Michael Kelly E. Thomas Khoury William R. Landry Michael Jerome Laney Joseph Edward Lewis, Jr. David P. McAndrew Paul Omer McGinn David Minior Kathleen E. Perry Lydia M. Rego Phyllis Carol Rosenfield Annemarie Saba Joan Mae Saroka Sheila Theresa Sheehan John Silva II Alan E. Snow Sharon S. Stelmark Jack Sweeney Victor M.B. Tavares Edmond Albert Warren Tessier Michael Anthony Vieira Jeffrey D. Wilson Linda Rolston Worden PSYCHOLOGY Stephen A. Almeida Nancy Carol Alves Nancy Claire Anderson Barbara K. Barrett Susan Elaine Barry Joan E. Bavoux Marc P. Beauregard Kristina Elizabeth Belli Joelle Ann Golen Belli Normand Raymond Benoit Susan Sharon Berberian Heidi Jane Bettencourt Hollis Ann Blackburn Constance L. Blanchard Y 1 r , . ll-'tins litIl1IwX'.u,yi - . r -11-'uilg l I'.i1i-.es-ll.ii.1 I Catlierisif' l . Burns Cyltlltla ljltllllll Brian l'lnIip Q .ilnal Mary Ann Caesar .lohn Caiati Francine A. Cainpeau Robert Douglas Carey Donna J. Caron Gerald R. Caron Thomas Francis Carr Maureen Cavanaugh Michael George Chadinha Adrien O. Chagnon Russell Louis Chevalier Kathleen Joy Cloutier Robbin Marie Comeau Kathleen Ann Cooney Charlene Ann Corey Rand Scott Corwin James F. Cunha Cynthia Fay Curtis Robert J. Decoste Jane Delano Anthony J. DeRosa Ronald G. Desnoyers Gail A. DeTerra Joseph P. Dunkerley Frances L. Dupuis Frances C. Fairbanks David L. Fontaine Ann H. Fournier Geraldine D. Frates Richard C. Frenette Ronald A. Gagne Theresa Marie Gavin Ann M. George Deborah Jayne Gomes Charlene Ann Grandmont Barbara B. Greene Kathleen J . Grundy Michael Lloyd Gubler Morris Paul Guilbert Richard E. Guillemette Lisa J . Hager Janice Grace Hagopian Gerard F . Hailer Margaret E. Harding Douglas R. Hardwick Elaine Ellen Hayes Ogoma Onyechi lbe Christopher P. Jarvis Carole J. Johnson William Robert Joseph Gary Paul Kanabay Amy Lauren Keefe Michael Raymond Kirkwood Nitza N. LaRoea Claire Loretta Lassonde Patricia Helen Lecuyer Leslie Louise Lipp Nancy Marie Love Dawn Joanne Mabardy John Steven Macedo David John Mahoney Raymond Joseph Mainville Marie A. Marcotte J. :'! ,I 1:4 6 a'. ,f',.u 5,1 'Q 5 ,, xx V S X Jeffrey D. Maronn Carleen Ventura Marlin Janice lg. Martins Henri R. Masse Linda Marie Mattos Edward If. McCormick Frances A. Mclioxyen Steven A. McGrath Dianne E. Mekie Janet Marie McNamara Nancy R. Medeiros Therese A. Melanson Edward G. Mello Beverly M. Mendonea Linda Marie Mitchell Maryanne Christine Mitchell Maryanne Christine Monsour John F. Morgan Aline T. Morin Suzanne Morse Maureen E. Murphy William Normand Napert. Jr. Audrey Ann Nickerson Marcia K. Nishanian Mary Ruth Noble Anne-Marie Nyhan Sharon Ochab Paul Michael Oliveira Joan E. Padrenoss Judith Ann Panora Donna Marie Parker Anne Leslie Parrnigiane Lauren L. Patrie Valerie M. Pederson Edward T. Rapoza Gerald L. Ready .loan Marie Rego Linda Rego Kathleen lx. Riley Carolyn Ann Rix Estelle T. Roach Charles Douglas Robertson Deborah Lynn Rock Linda Sue Rogers Barbara Elsie Rosenthal Y l ' I U , y 1 lu: is ' .H .., Xf- Shelley A. Sandler Ann Marie Shaker Nancy Lynn Silva Brenda M. Souza Gregory M. Spiker Eileen M. St. Martin William A. Swan Barbara D. Sylvia Edward J. Sylvia Debra Lynne Szretter Deborah Faith Thomas Ellen M. Thran William J. Towers Barry Alan Turnbull Ana Cristina Valente Donna M. Viveiros Jayne Cieto Viveiros Suzanne Marie Vrona Elaine R. Waters Melia'Mae White Robert M. Wilcox Ronald C. Wildrick Susan Lee Willis Dawn Shelley Winkler Gary E. Yakstis Lester K. Yensan Carol Lynne Ziajor SOCIOLOGY Anthony M. Adriano Gary A. Almeida Shirley M. Amaral Ray Burt Angers Manuel S. Andrade, Jr. Mina Louise Baccelli Sharon Anne Banas Charles L. Baptista Bryon Barboza Patricia A. Barton Julie E. Bearse Deborah V. Belezos Jean Beneducci Beneduci Richard Boelee Bolanle C. Bolarinwa-Jagun 7 ii FI? .41 if iv . A N 2 tx ,kv ' VL'q , R : . famine if ' 11-Riggs -13-5,-5 1 5:5 - SEQ Fi ' N4 1-2.3127-T..'z -Z 'H' 'TY'- 52Q ' ..-l 1' . hifi Triw -Fira ' 5 ' - u-fit. if N .. N - - ' 'rr . L-xii? 7.4 N . at NY as sf .. A E M3 . L A . K ' 1 ' , N'C7f, rrz' ' A 'i ris . E.'-fqfqxt 4' t if- X15 ll 1 1' 7 - ' KA - -.f.:f.:.-X fx - 5 'E F FA' S2'j.3j25 Si+-.xi , .. . A 1525: ,--,V f:1,w3ai,,,' . ...,.. -Airs. E' V - ...W cet.:-145 . . x - 4: , 1 - . ygi ik :Z if fer' fl!-Qi if+iqYl,f-15' - A if 5fiiP .FfEYL'lifmlfwerg f. -,N ..- va .f . . V fl' S..- -f V- by -- Fm--3.u 'a r -.Amt-Q3 tiiiif ' .. .11 M- 'Nil .-13,-111: ' 'skit A 'Z' 554554 ' 2:12-.4 - M ' gf 4- ' -- 5 . it . a... 25- -- N L..-Q.: 1.-NK 5. l tfsfxf ' 4 . - . .- . egg A Q-. Q its ' -Q-.X ES ' L,.,.g-- '-2S-- s- 9-355--'--1 . 'ifcgigr - . M1351-33 'lsnjifre . rr ,ft ukglegygqtlv David A. Bonaparte Arleen Linda Brevich Charles M. Briody David Brodeur JoAnne Tomko Bryant Daniel J. Cambra Michael Adam Cardoza Barbara Rose Chandler Marc Charette Donna Marie Correia Gino M. Costa Brenda J. Cote Beverly M. Dean Mary Theresa Downing Anne Jacqueline Driscoll Vivian E. Duff Walter Michael Dziordz Christine Farrell Michael Joseph Ferreira Janice M. Ferretti John Joseph Fortin David L. Freitas Verna W. Galvin Dennis Rogers Gonsalves Peter H. Goss Robert Thomas Granfield Pamela K. Hall Sandra Hallal Sean Peter Hargreaves Mary S. Haskell Marc Jean Heon Janice Marie Hutch Dorothy Kallevik Christine C. Kapopoulos Marian Ellen Keef John J. Leandro Julie Andrea Leen Judith A. Lincoh1 Rose A. Lobo Donald A. Lyonnais Susan Ruth Macabello Nancy Jean Madeira Brian Marcshall Marshall Sharon Ann Mekelatos Lucille M. Morris Ellen M. Mullane Jeffrey Paul Najarian Dawn Elizabeth Nightingale Steven M. Oulette Ouellette Susan Elizabeth Owen Gail Anne Pacheco Mariann Pallatroni Patricia Elaine Peterson Timothy J. Peterson Joni L. Piel Dianne Celeste Poulin Veronica M. Robdau Andrea Robinson Joyce Ann Rogers Jeanne Elizabeth Saab Thomas Russell Santos Robin Elizabeth Sawler James Patrick Shea Paul R. Smith Linda M. Souza Nancy M. Souza Edward F. St. John, Jr. Jeffrey Peter Sullivan Judith Ann Tavares Manuel F . Tavares Gloria J. Thurlow Eduardo Ortiz Velazquez Elizabeth A. Ward Linda Joyce Wheelock George C. Williamson Robert A. Yaffe M-'eb ,.,.,a 4. ,wi g lim 11 'Z 3 if f 4- r T , 1 wr--Q' -Milf u w 10 ,W H Q M H ,i, .4412 A49 V illfis-4-anus-.u 4. BUSINESS AND INDUSTRY Richard Patrick Ahern,Jr. Stephen H. Alhander Bruce A. Almeida Victor Manuel Almeida Arthur Albert Allard, Jr Bruce Alves William Thomas Anderson Noel B. Anderson David Walter Andrew ! 'L 4-un' if F 'wr -calf' 393' M J 'Vi-'f lr A 1 3 A 'I' Jw? f , . ' .l! '1'-1Z '1'-:.v 1 . ,- ' 1ff'f l'f'rf PL W4 A e 1 .' ,bw ' Q . Fa-P iw , Tff f' 1 ' As Y., . ma: ,- swf N f . 4 P ,-sf, fs:-, f ,, 11 ii J ' 1 2 ' X ff F f:f2fs9'4 4 A0 Patricia ldiulu AIICHI Donald A. Arruda George Howard Barlow X X xi X Marianne Patrice Barry Q ,X Kathleen L. Bassett xr wg 'iii at Peter Creighton Boomian Nancy Marla Briss Karen M. Brown James Joseph Bryant 'Z' John Camera A A .IUPUI DLIYIS Clgppcflun 'Aytf' , 1, w t L ' 'ZF 1 Stephen M. Camara ' M Earl hdwurd may 2 25. ,4 , . ,Q ff. .59 4 Anne B. Chitty lk , it if at - - Winston llumcl Coblw John A. Cole II' Steven Walter Cole Patricia Anne ' ' , su' Z Kathleen A. Cdrcoran a James Crunha in Elizabeth Ann Cushman Bruce A. Daggett Arthur E. Daigle Sandra E. DeCarlo XY Q fl, Y ,113 Jcrry' l'rlU In-Ilcrl Joan Laura Dc'Icrru XJ M W Q 'A . .Ii 11 'Q ,af ul George Raymond dcN'1ll.H Stewart J. Dick Robert Fran cis Doherty,Jr Michael 1 Q - L. fl 'W John Raymond Douglas Thomas Michael Downey Michael A. Downes D David G. Fernandes,Jr. W K x f ' 3 l :Q Stephen Lionel Forand Patricia Eileen Gallagher A IU! 'qlmcl lgunu lhirrnly culriuc Rogers Ciolimlws jlll .. Claire Cecile Guimond Alton LeRoy Hambly III Patel lfujge '50 35341 wage 5: ff James Milton Hickox Robert G. Hilton 1 Q ex: uf f l gl ,vaswtgw--1 A 1 f 1 4,, .l'fzf.-1224+ Ar' 3' ' i t 31521133 . -- iifhv M i ' ,-gggxfzfg James ln. Holding -. ij T? f Joseph Philip Jason, Jr. Peter K. Kaulins Mary Elizabeth Kirkman 'Vx ,JMX inf' ,VB 2 ' .- in-14 Y 'Qt if Russell Rolwrl KIUNIIICI John Seo!! Krgackc .lunicc NI. l,,g1Hoc Robert Francis Lundgren Theresa M. Macedo Christopher John K- Ronald A. Magnant Stephen Michael Makara Joseph M cCabe Brian Timothy McCarthy Albert J. McCoy Lori Ann McGowan if ,J '3 I f I, ,. Jam-pil S Pflllfyl. JJ' In-nW..o1 x1 xxx M. Keith E. Miceli John Benjamin Naatz Teke Njei z Z v 1 IS... ,,, h D -x wi vii it S Edna R. Nickerson Ann Marie 0'Brien Albert C. Oullette Gene Ouellette A Stanley Thomas Pitera William Alan Price 't- ' I if qi ti, ,D 'nal' Isaac Pupmmlu Nancy lzlizubcth RClL'llLlL'S amucl Ifrgmk Rouen 'A bakvf S 'l ' I David Rodrigues Dennis M. Rose Raymond Henry ROSZROX-vs1.,'i-'. eff' mr Susan R. Rudnick Robert John Savage Ann Marie Seekell Steven Sgourakes Clark A. Smedstud Craig Michael Sniffen rn Sum.: scph le. Stone lk-lN1'4n.l. Mm-run X Anthony Michael Tavares Arthur Tremblay, Jr. Cheryl M1111 X 'M 'Rf k fb by ff' gifs 'Q u ,g lr E5.fFi fF'?'5' I ut 5 as 5 sl I-:xx sf-ms-,Qs A I Ark 'hs 51515055 vb .fi gig! at 1 5 2 :init-VN' Q! as 2.1: ff'112-:Sf-a'.4.-f,-,ri nn: +11 'Winn John F. Uchmanowicz Peter David Vatousiou William Anthony Viveiros George W. Vipon Stephen Francis Wallace Francis Phillip Ward , ,eq a 45' 4- Will -fe -ffmhltfiffvf, 2 .Qi -ul -3 aaa? 'H 5, Y' 1219 Effii' V, 3323-1235 , Jo' 1129? A Q li . - 5 Slvpllcll l'ClL'I'WllllQ1lIlx Colin l l'Lil1CiSuAillilIlllS Thomas Rich.u'd My In ACCOUNTING Bruce A. Almeida Noel B. Anderson Richard A. Anderson David Walter Andrew John M. Antao Veronica Melaine Bannish Albert R. Beauvais Bradford R. Bibeau Russell H. Brillon Carold Henry Brownell, Jr. Clark Edward Bryan Richard Bussiere Armand David Cabral David Capella Priscilla Crane Chauncy Anne B. Chitty Lucien A. Cretian Kathleen A. Corcoran Susan M. Cotreau Douglas R. Crabtree William C. Cray Elizabeth Ann Cushman Robert Reynolds Cutler Bruce A. Daggett Evelyne A. DeJonghe Jerry Fritz Dellert James M. Dembrowski Paul William Desrosiers George Raymond George Raymond deVillars Thomas Michael Downey Stephen Lionel Forand Kevin Francis Galligan Michael James Garrity Joseph John Geary RichardM. Goodell Steven Douglas Gouveia Susan J. Gracia Lawrence W. Gray Claire Cecile Guimond Michael F. Harrington George H. Hebert Brian Paul Hellwege - V er . 2 'wi' 'EXE 1-K - we .qi .,..,..yN.,, , -33.35 .. . X X F k . i 1.-. L-.5 igl. ls.-if James E. Holding Jesse Jackson, Jr. Donald A. Lafleur Paul A. Lavallee Janice M. Lavioe Lavoie Elaine B. LeBeau Paul Regent Leblanc Rebecca Sue LeBlanc David John Leite Alan G. Lima Mark John MacLeod Dennis Michael Maguire Edmond McCarthy Albert J. McCoy Joseph S. McGuire William M. Nesse Ann Marie O'Brien David W. Oliveira Albert C. Oullette Louis Pavao,Jr. Jeanne Marie Pelletier Richard Allen Perkins Alden T.Pierce III William B. Quinney Robert N. Renard, Jr. Nancy Elizabeth Rezendes Kathleen Ann Ricker Michael J. Rizzo Samuel Frank Rocco Raymond Henry Roszkowicz Kevin Mark Rowles Susan R. Rudnick George Milton Sadler III George Ekow Sagoe Alison Jean Schenker Ann Marie Seekell Craig Michael Sniffen John Elias Thomas Robert F. Tolken, Jr. J. Mark Treadup Buof u Ugbode Raymond Vasconcelos William Anthony Viveiros Francis Phillip Ward Bruce H. Winstanley Michael K. Wojtunik Thomas Richard Wylie FINANCE William Thomas Anderson Patricia Idiata Aneni Robert P. Botelho Paul C. Burke Dean M. Cocoran Corcoran James G. Dykas Robert Elias Kowayeck Judith A. Kearley Mary Elizabeth Kirkman Brian Timothy McCarthy Deborah M. Medeiros fficralrl P. Montigny igugerre Arthur Ouellette .Fairies B. Roberts Davitl A. Rosa Michael A. Silvia INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS Marianne Patrice Barry Robert Joseph Bouchard John A. Cole II Steven Walter Cole Stewart J. Dick Joseph Arthur Duquette, Jr. Martha Graves Falconer F. Daniel Haley Robert Alan Johnson John Scott Kracke Robert Francis Lundgren Christopher John Madden Joseph McCarthy Keith E. Miceli David Alvin Purdy George W. Vipon MAN AGEMAENT Bruce Alan Abreu Randall S. Aguiar Richard Patrick Ahern,J r. Stephen H. Alhander Arthur Albert Allard, Jr. Donald A. Arruda Mark A. Badwey Donna Marie Bailey Richard Charles Banna George Howard Barlow Russell Belanger George William Bragga Anthony F. Britto Leo J. Brunelle James Joseph Bryant Joseph Thomaz Cabral, Jr. Peter R. Cadden Carl Edwin Cahoon John Camara Stephen M. Camara Robert Canuel. Jr. John Davis Clapperton Earl Edward Clay Patricia Anne Corbett John C. Crider Arthur E. Daigle Manuel P. DaRosa John William DeBlois Wesley T. De Campos Sandra E. DeCarlo Mark R. DeLisio David B. Desmarais Joan Laura DeTerra Robert Francis Doherty.J r Michael Edward Donaghy Antoinette Estrella James Edward Ezemoli David G. Fernandes, Jr. Gerald Jay Ferreira Robert Mark Folsom Armand Donald Forand Maurice P. Fournier Edward Frederick Fowler, Jr Norman F. Franz Patricia Eileen Gallagher Stephen Joseph Garro George Joseph Gates Steven John Giammalvo Paul Anthony Gilchrist Beatrice Rogers Gonsalves Jerome A. Gonsiewski Jr. Robert E. Harris Il William R. Hathaway Paul Eugene Heinig James Milton Hickox Dennis Mitchell Holmes Kenneth Eze Ibe Scott T. Jacobson Joseph Philip Jason, Jr. Peter K. Kaulins Susan G. King Peter Pak Hung Kwok Jeffrey Paul Larivee Diane Marie Lawrence Eric J. LePage John David Lloyd Robert A. Lucas Sharon K. Lynch Ronald A. Magnant Stephen Michael Makara Jeffrey I. Mann Lori Ann McGowen Ronald V. McKay Eugene P. Messier Brian Paul Milan Gregory Alan Morris Richard S. Mossey, Jr. Peter Edward Murby John Benjamin Naatz Donald E. Napert Barry L. Nickerson Edna R. Nickerson Brian D. Nobrega Gregory Robert Noyes Mark Nunes Dennis Olson Lambert Madu Onuoha Stephen L. Orbe Stanley Thomas Pitera Charles P. Read Dennis M. Rose Carl James Sahady Stephen H. Santos Kevin W. Sarafin Robert John Savage Donald E. Silvia Martin Gregory Simas Stephen G. Sohles John Sousa Paul Emile Souza Joseph E. Stone III Edward Sullivan, Jr. Dennis Wayne Sylvia Steven Wayne Taber Alan F. Teixeira Arthur Tremblay, Jr. Francis J. Tucker Francis J. Tucker Cheryl Marie Tyson Peter David Vatousiou Nicholas P. Wagner Stephen Francis Wallace Stephen Peter Williams Jeffrey J. Wood 'lk' 'YJ Nil XxkJx'il.iQ.'l 'xiltflllki 'i1- '.. Jx.llJ.Jk t li J.JD.l sw ll John li. llasxak Nancy Nlarla lliiss Karen Nl. lironn Wayne ti. Brow n Mark Camaelio Edward Albert fkllgllsl tx-il William J. Conhoy James Robert llaskain Frank John Deinakowski Dembkowski John Raymond Douglas Michael A. Downes Dennis Episcopo Patricia Jean Furgal Robert Edward Gillis Alton LeRoy Hambly lll Joanne Mary Hamel Ronald Lee Hughes ll Philip H. Hurwitz Glenn Bryant Kinnear Russell Robert Kroszner Kenneth Andre Leconte .Anthony J. Lennon William Robert Looney. Jr. Michael J. Luongo Theresa M. Macedo Bruce .F. Machamer Mark Henry Mclntyre Russell W. McPhee Joseph C. Miller Ill Teke Njei Ndi Raymond N. Normandin Michael W. O'Connor Isaac Olufemi Popoola William Alan Price Kurt Evan Sagar David John Santos Steven C. Sgourakes William F. Sullivan Debra J. Sweeney James J. Walsh Colin Francis Williams TEXTILE CHEMISTRY Robert Charles Busch Gil Machado, Jr. Michael Rosa Henry J. Vaillancourt, Jr. TEXTILE TECHNOLOGY Victor Manuel Almeida Bruce Alves Peter Creighton Boorman Florence M. Boulos Stephen Maurice Brunelle Winston Daniel Cobb. Jr. Michael Duclos Marc Daniel Etehells Richard Neal Gram Albert li. Heywood Robert G. Hilton Joseph Hummel 0.2 zz if, Andrei Klein Joanne Nl. Nlaresea Matthew P. Nlefininess Stanley R. Nliska Michael Kevin Nlodloxxski Thomas M. Pease Stephan P. Queipo Riehard Raymond Rego David Joseph Rodreqiies Rodrigues Paul ll. Serials. Jr. William R. Silxeira Clark A. Smedslad Anthony Nliehael 'lignares Jolm lf. UCJIIIILJIIOXNICI GI ER NG Joanne Barton Richard Bergeron Raymond A. Blfoadliurrs. L Qgigl he K. 1 . X, wiv 'Q 5 Nlvs-ar ya 9,139 is J V ig ,fffflggyogms 2 K, ,.1l,',i,'N?1?51'J,sa,v1 Q2 Steven Albert Burns Alan Cavacas David Marshall Chick i Christopher D. Cocomazzi William E. Condon Robert J. Correia Z X i f -,513 . ,, 2 f ...ni 1 lf?- Ciury Viillnum firm-. gi X N 3 5 x Kcl1l1cll1lJcC'uxIga u ' -vow E x N, . Q, 'l!'Y, M -Q-9' f xiiiiqj,-gfsei T15 ,Q 1 Thomas Dcluncp John Francis Dempsey Kenneth A. Felteau Francis A. DePaola gg D311 Ffifl Kevin M. Foley ohm L5::1QUow MQ N.. jk ,, H... ...B xlllglllfl GU'-lx 4- , 1? Q, ,uns 'fib i Eric William Johnston David Kraig Olukay ode E qi in f r V '-f M. ,f Nr--... Q., - v , . B, F N as .fd i ,, Y Q eg S, Y-P' SQ5 N fflixg Tommy Wai Fung Kwan Stephen L. Labrie Kin Kau Lai rel Cho Kwan Lau '55 ,A ig 1,152 , Mark Lydon x '-as Richard Machado N' b..,'9 7 uxun .'Xll.m Niall g 'r IJ. N ' wrt S. Mui Mark Thomas O'Nei1 1 a , X N . X - f li ' g , 3 A if Peter H. Narbonne Jose J. Rodriques, Jr Timothy Clayton Shangraw 101:24 3 .S Gary Lee Rogers David Peter Roy --' Iii- ' ' h Albert E. Ryder ,il A Afrgihi V E ' h N J Thomas bilva William R. Silveira Theodore Smith, Jr. 3 fx. -, 1vf'. ' . AP, fx ' KA-L. 'Q O QQ! 1 'lccrgnilnuSmnnku w , , i Mark Sullivan I fi Alun L. Wccks nw:-we,:ff1zfw4:124ff1..-5::2.4zJeig5 'K ' K'-' tep CII O3qL11I'l'l OEIICS 1252.94 fijfa 1 f - zw:,w,2, hiffiix w f f' 41-is-4 Dirk fxric Zwgirl CIVIL ENGINEERING Roy Victor Bousquet Walter Thomas Chaffee 'Francis A. DePaola John Joseph Hamm II Eric William Johnston Nicholas E. Kathijotes Paul Robert LaFrance Mark C. Lydon William M. Mahoney Daniel James McCormick Roger D. Metthe Steven Allan Mills William James Roche Louis R. Schmitt Timothy Clayton Shangraw Victor M. Silva Stephen Joaquim Soares Dirk Arie Zwart CIVIL ENGINEERING TECHNOLOGY Joseph M. Benevides, Jr. William E. Condon John Francis Dempsey Kevin M. Foley Lester M. Johnson Joseph Robert Jorge Armindo P. Louro George Moses Garry Alan Nickerson Robert Piazza Gary Lee Rogers Michael Edward Sarrasin William T. Southworth Kevin Edward Swenson Willis R. Tarnowski ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING Michael John James Bianchini Ralph Franklin Bliss John Antone Botelho Raymond A. Broadhurst Frederick E. Brown Steven Albert Burns Harold F. Cambell III Sug Sterio Chan Robert Colin Clarke Thomas Delaney Maurice Roger Desrosiers Antonio M. Figueiredo Miguel F. Gouveia Maurice J. Griffin William R. Hawe Barry W. Kashar David Kenyon Duff David Kiri-Qlewski Alan S. ilirshncr Tommy Wai Fung Kwan Dennis R. Lz.ii1'm. Richard Machado James A. Mello Jan T. Messek Robert S. Murphy, 1' Robert R. Nogueira James T. Oblinger, Jr. James R. Podsiadlo William Arthur Samaras Wallace Robert Schubach Mark Sullivan Stephen A. Sylvia Paul E. Tripp ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING TECHNOLOGY James R. Arruda Richard Bergeron Anthony R. Caldwell Mark Cloutier Christopher D. Cocomazzi George L. Fravica John Lynn Glover Neal Bennett Goldstein Ronald Gorda Michael Burke Hayes George J . Leurini William George Lisk Vernon Mace Thomas N. O'Grady David Frederick Papuga Keith Clifford Parker Jose J. Rodriques, Jr. David Peter Roy James C. Siwik Theodore Smith, Jr. Robert Bond Vose INDUSTRIAL ENGINEERING TECHNOLOGY Olukayode James Komolafe MECHANICAL ENGINEERING James W. Adams Patrick Brogan Paul W. Chevier Chevrier Robert J. Correia Gerald D. Cowan II Richard Dale Dennis Maroun F. El-Khouri Timothy Lee Hoffman Gary Russell Magoon Clyde S. McCray Peter H. Narbonne David Willaims Plentus Bronie Rozenas. Jr. Arthur'M. Salve, Jr. Frederick John Uchman Alan L. Weeks Gary S. Whitney Michael L. Wilson MECHANICAL ENGINEERING TECHNOLOGY Kenneth W. Augustine David Marshall Chick Gary William Crowley Paul C. Desmarais Kenneth A. Felteau Mitchel H. Forman Danny E. Gelbar Mark M. Griffin Richard Beckley Keeler Stephen L. Lubrie Mark Thomas O'NciI Robert W. Pcrreuult. .I r Jeffrey P. Poliquin Albert EverettRydcr Albert Everett Ryder Kyle A. Sunduhl Paul D. Schofield Roongsuk Singhuphulin Teerachui Srisirikul David B. Tucker James E. Ziobro R. I I ' . J . SK 'nl X A .IX ,E Q 0--.- il Q 2 v . , S . -. '- ' 'Hu . EM if ....... l TN a f 1 i Y . . 3 'I M 4 - M , 5. . ,. gi X , 2 a v V 2' Q Lv, f is , , .'. ,Q , 'V mg .' ,Fr 'sm :fiv- 15 , .M s , QQ ,lan : ' -M y lx X , , , i T Ptilrv. lx. Q V X ,nk QQ? 1 Q.-556 .. fi c k X: k .gf . S R K Y L si x 4 ' 'ax- , X, 4 1 5 3 X R Ng 1 ' v is R ' 'S Q j . 3 Ak a 5, , , . f 1 gg , iw i c 1 'S 4 Q , ' 1 A S' X 4 Q A g , vi S . K I I 2 3 X x , X N xc x Q y' x 2 1 1 f 1 Q iq Q 1 1 xx R 2 S Q r x W U a 1 .1 Q S . , + x Q K :UL B Q 3 2, Q . W r x 5 Q V 1 X ax X Ei 3 X N x K? ' 9 x X, wx ,, 4' f vm :bt w xl 5, ses Q 2 i ,,:F :f: , m x-Q.,-.5 X fi Y Q 'ttf s x Q QQ ' B Y Q X - -25-- ' ..e-:gif r 'b. x , .YQ 1 Q X A X: W fb g wh Fx wi , 5 x,xX X X I x pf ,X 1 X x 3 1 i z ' N V Bw a xg x X X X fx f E we as . HW- S1-L'dSi-ff , iz Ye? A5 '-3' f 1 -.X 1,4 - an xg fav. - 3- ww- 4-. ,.,..ffx- A V.. . .A - - -. Y 3955: 4,-tq,,3 1325-f 'M,iQff, n V ' ' ,- 2 I wa, - , .- I ,I A A 5 'W '1'.r..'5,- Q , 'N fvx ' .r-,E 1 v -. -'Nr ' .vi . ,V rf '1' Smeg, ww f - U - ' ' 'Lv - . .. 1, x N.. .. K -- .. ,. - Y. .,-fp-. 5153 'R -::3G:Q'1,,, FQ 4. wi- -1 11' .. ,,-f:1, - ' 150' -.ff '2:'f?2:s 51' 'W 3 -I ' ,. g I D '1.' Y - ,J 'yggifn' ' A V - j g x - ' 1 -k K .-' Vw-' , .-jyi , 25-.fff if ' f 113 5:4 4' ff . V 511' ' i ffw?53F' ' '-1: I V Wing' ia:2Ei?9f,az', ' ' K i2'15'gia 'Q-4, 5. A- gjfggggz. zdggggggf.. ,gg 153 511-1,.1q, ' Rr' A, xg 'X gli-----5 . ' :yr'i' 424542 fl Y im g Q 125- 'kitti- A fg.y.'.a, -f xg. g , 13 1- .,- A---,Ql,rx5,:X 3,523 . TLw4if'.'x ..fa:.a,+4'14at .. N ,,,'3-HIM' -.ff-me '. A N -1 ,,SIW1R.: A 'iffy ' fkiiivfi Q' 'f R -'kffgz - 1- -1- fwygi Lge . 59.5 jj! 'gf lin? P f:1,w. A V- , 'J -1.22 -' -.x 1' 1' L L, , . P , I 1, - ':., if -W, ,ff 'iz M. . . ,JM . 3 612:51 :xH ' J, J' 245' V 3 ,. 1? ' .1. 4 'Sw'-f. H -a wx w 15,-.Wg-f5,45',.4f' ,rt w 'X ' !wffTff'?.? ' aff:-,, Y . Lx, , - 1 P -mn ' f sr 5 D A gf' , f - 5' ZA- If I , , ,I I' I fyll f ,qw ' 'Q N . 1, V5 w, I l . v . 4,4--N ' 3 4 15 Ml W' LTL - V -'Qi Sq- IJ I E AND PPLIED ARTS Laurie Miriam Aikens Jacqueline Bache Rosemary Bregoli Z? Ann Marie Costa Nancy A. Cote Stuart R. Darsch Jane Ellen Donahue Sheila Elinor Donnelly Lynn M. Gonsalves ' ru lslhcr Ihr 'ry A. lllplxty cunnullc Nlgxrlc Mark Joseph Loughlin Katherine David LopeS Ali. j r-'LIL' ' , 5 .- -A, ' ,I 46? A Sw -S57 ' ' AWWA Q r W' X i .V X ' -. ! T, t e x I lx. K lin, 51 JL K z rp 1 1 f Q ' ,W -i f'-' ' 1, ' :af A- N Y kllfif H 'X Q X V i t . 1 ,- ' ' .-KW, K, r , ff , Lg ff I ' 4 P Q J .x 1 v M5 I N J r M 5 fb X K, ffl A X f 4 I N rf , I K , if M- if M . V, AA .:ei ' , 1 i Ang. H . , T- , - , , 'lllfi fy if 1 QS! 41 'A ' 3,2 E. fe' A i, ,f ff 4 l, KX Q v , .. ,Y if . lg, 'il 4- X ' ' ' wif ff' , 'Y 1 3 ? Y' il iw h ,a gg it 1 in Richard McClea1'y Pamela J. Moynahan Allen Richard Makepeace Linda Marie Massa Kathleen A. Nicholson Robert Packert ,l.nm'lNl.1I1 I 1111 LCC I HL' LHC- .. Jan E. Reynolds f f'X , , , ' I ,,,f!N Deborah Alice Roberts f 5'l 1 ::+'5 6 1 ' C, - ,, W ft savior 1 Emi, , ., .lip , 2. iw -v 2 ' . ' -an g Ewfffiflglf, ..f-L .sfs:, had ' A- ,la-ewasskxi' -Q ,a av H aw 4f1?,:ii'2w 'vf 'ff w +14 , Q,5yiqQW?e'f: ,. Si ,-,xr ,f2f!,,.. , Q,- 15515 .fawvfe Q-igeaief' - J :2'1Q'wfQN' A.-rv si 75 M Si Y M lg vqfgif' in-wi 1-5.xgJ.g,.L,Qrg5'zs mx sr l pg.: ' mg ,gn of L- A if N9 X, :-fm, ,X ...gsm-el - 'M ji N ,Rm Q., Susan Ann Smith Celeste Snowber Preston James has ,, George M. Sylvia, J r Barry W. Van Dusen Timothy Joseph Welsh N11 ll XNI1 l I1 K. QLIQIIP' X, Q BACHELOR OF FINE ARTS ART EDUCATION Susan C. Bettencourt Diane Martha Boland Arnold Casavant Elena Finiello Laureen Ann Forio Susan Ritchie Galeros John Gedraitis Janet E. Gendreau Debra Ester Esther Hart Gary James Hartwell Clifford A. Mattson Dennis M. Moneghan Lynn B. Newall Robert John Souza Craig Appleton Wronski ART HISTROY Kenneth Albert Ashworth Joan M. Bickmann Ann Celeste McGuire Bolduc Karen Lovering Hayward Philip Alan Oliveira Ardith Joan Rezendes Celeste Snowber Claire Ann Williams PAINTING Jacqueline Bache Nancy A. Cote Joseph Paul Dunn Catherine M. Griffin Ronald Eric Gustavson Diane Issa John Francis Mahoney Kathy Ann Marzilli Pamela J. Moynahan Judith Naftygiel George Paul Nahas Mary Elizabeth Natalizia Kathleen A. Nicholson Kenneth C. Richards Kathleen M. Sullivan Laurence E. Vienneau. Jr. Timothy Joseph Welsh PRINTMAKING Lynda Jeanne D'Amico 'TEXTILE DESIGN I5-iinna Batflow' liescuraryr frsnic Thornas lanicig Moria.: Jane igiieir , if Debra . Lyiicli Linda Mai ie lkla-11s.:: Deborah Paqucuc fLIIiR'L.l. Kenneth Gordon Oliveira Janet Marie Panicci Carcn Ruth Perlmuttcr Linda Marie Reitz Susan Ann Smith Dawn Jackson Stopka Deborah Lee Westcott Michele A. Whalen VISULA DESIGN Laurie Miriam Aikens D. Michael Alberghene Sandra Susan Allessio Alessio Donald Betts Amy L. Boocock Stephen Borghi Marilyn D. Caldwell Ilene Gale Cohen Ann Marie Costa Peter A. Cross Stuart R. Darsch Sheila Elinor Donnelly Patrick J. Donovan Robert P. Galan Lynn M. Gonsalvesl Ronald Steeves Hagerman I Leona Mary Herzig 1 Mary A. Hickey Jeannette Marie Joly Wlater D. Koenig David Lopes Mark Joseph Loughlin Katherine Ann Mahoney Allen Richard Makepeace Richard McCleary Kathleen Murray Brook Elizabeth Nelson Charles T. Newall, Jr. Eric J. Niebel Bruce S. Nutting Jon Eric Olson Joyce Ellen Pastman Nancy J. Phelps Jan E. Reynolds Deborah Alice Roberts Preston James Robison Linda Joyce Sekelsky Mark St. Amand Judy Lynne Staebler George M. Sylvia, Jr. James Brian Tata Barry W. Van Dusen MASTER OF FINE ARTS ART EDUCATION David Paul Kenney MASTER OF ARTS BILINGUAL BICU LTURAI. l1lJl'I'.X I It JN Cristina C. Ajemian Bernadette B. Beaulieu Darlen C. Campos Mario Castro Anarolino M. L. deSousa Christine Fernandes Christine M. Fernandes M. Conceieao R. C. Ferreira Silvino C. Ferreira Cassandra B. Fitzgerald Joseph Jesse Fonseca ThelmaAGouveia M. Joselina Guerreiro Martha Kay Jean Lantz Maria Gloria Marcelino Ronald William Medeiros Marilyn L. Morgado Anthony S. Nunes Ruth Anderson O'Connor Mary Lucy Pereira Norberto C. Resendes Amelia S. Slater Mary C. Whittaker BIOLOGY Peter Robert Bellacera Leah A. Curran Jack Peter Schwartz Thomas W. Yourk MARINE BIOLOGY Richard Joseph Pruell Michael G. Catano Robert Joseph Leger Paul Souza BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION Normand J. Bergeron Jon L. Bryan Gordon M. Carrolton Leslie Robert Clift, Jr. William B. Collins Karen Lee Bassett Dias Robert Mario Falconero Michael R. Goldrick Robert J. Guarnieri Robert T. Houghten,Jr. Houghton, Jr. John Bernt Kallevik Eugene Edward LaBonte, Jr. Bruce F. Meacham Richard Carl Morra Carl Thomas Nakkula Paul R. Pacheco Douglas Noel Perry f ' X , Ill 'tis Ig I . I,,i, ll , X ' If! Lflifl ily i I.iIlII.-..:.lN .ir 1 Iiitlwll I iiii.iiiiu:'n XMI 1 NIHII f.lI.it I III IRII .XI I XMIXI I RIM Rwltcll I . Illillesiic Ixuil tieiil Slim-I'ti Iillu R1cIiardJoliiiIil.i Wayne NI. Ising Clio Is. I.au I,LlllI I.CNL'sqlIL' Claire V. Messier Paul R. Nlessier Thomas W. Nlolinslti Cliuen K. Ouels Robert Joseph Souza Abdolrefa lsliodai 'I alreslii Paul B. Talewsky MEDICAL LABORATORY St II 'st I Marcia L. Agree Donna Butler Susan M. Collins Jean P. Edmond Robert Eugene Felton Paulette Maria Baxemore lloxi Susan J. Leclair David A. Lord Gloria Mandeville Magid Kathleen A. Pease Paiva Stephen Michael Pasquale Walter Ernest Valliere Monica Wawszkiewiez PHYSICS Paul Michael Ilill TEXTILE CIIEM ISTRY Arun K. Agrawal William Il. Beaudry Raymond L. Richard Chia-Hsiang Tsou I TEXTILE TECIINOLOGN Robert W. Ilall Thomas R. Perkins MASTER OI: Ifllslz ARIS VISUAL DESIGN Nancy Callahan Paul C. Domingue Hetty Friedman John Erie Ilovermale Thomas Koerner Joseph Richard Sullren Osb Susan Mohl Powers Norma Smayda fr' . I' I.. URSING Elizabeth Anne Blake Beverly Joyce Bradford Lynne A. Bus: r ' 1 1 Noreen P. Carr Mary Elizabeth Carrier Paulette Melanie Chartier Phyllis Hume Correia Cheryl Jacqueline Croteau Nancy Dizer 495 I 1 l.ueruln.4 I rn h nn .1 Loc Ly 1. '.L Jeanne B. Martineau Marjorie Ann Mason Maria Celeste Q- Cheryl Ann Pelletier Lee Ann Rooney 4 t If L , A -,W I I '4 I A J ff ' V. 57' aziqggi . , it Scott Evans Rounsevllle in Q J. - Gloria T. Aubut Spindola y .M . 1 . :Y 7 IH. iw., Karen A. Taylor Patricia Louise Tolentino bg. A 2 L-'Q 2? ..n. ...K . I P! il W I-J. 1 4. lil .' ll '. Jlltlllll X xy ' lX.tll!lt .'l ly ' ' Rat licl Xnn lil. 1 If .i:..l l ll!.lllk'lll .Xniic l5l.il.t Noiina l inily liluitlaiitl lhrislinc l , Iiiuilg.-.,,t lfCNUl'ly Jllycc lfhltlllllnl Sliaron Ann limlvlts Sllarinl llanicllc linmii Ly nnc A. Burl Norccn P. falll' Mary 1 lifahcth C .niicr Slcxcn Nlicliacl C .iiwallul Mary Lhllstinc Cassitly Paulcttc Mclanic C harticx Mary C'ln'islinc Clissitly Collcttc R. Cloulicr Dorothy J. Cloulicr Richartl P. Colxscll' Phyllis lluinc Corrcia Chcryl Jacquclinc Crotcau Jacquclinc M. Dcsjardins Jcannc Maric Dorc Gail Susan Driscoll Janct l-'arias Ann Lucrctia lfrich Nancy Lcc Gibson Mary Lllcn Ryan llaydcn Victoria B. llcmingway Barbara Ann llcndricks Dianc Maric Jarvis John Francis Kuznar Patricia Ann Larkin Hcathcr Jaync Long Julia lilainc Rickcr Low Donna Lcc Lyman Joycc l. MAndcll Mandcll Karcn Etta Nlartin Jcannc B. Martincau Marjoric Ann Mason Karcn Annc McCarthy Barbara R. Mcliwcn Diana Susan Minassian Maria Cclcstc Miranda Patricia Margarct Mitchcll Carol S. Mosxczcnski Linda Loutlcll Moxlcy Dianc Mulcahy Janinc M. Nadcau Maurccn lfranccs O'C'onnoi Cynthia Annc Pallcschi Chcryl Ann Pcllcticr Waltcr ll. Polcsky Sharlcnc A. Rcitl Chcryl Ann Rollo Lcc Ann Rooncy Scott Lxans Rounscvillc Cathy I. Shorc Gloria T. Aubut Spindola liarcn A. Taylor Patricia Louisc Tolcntino Bcth Ann Watson Richalcc C. Wiggs Patricia Ann Wyatt Nothing is ever permanent. When someone or something makes us happy, them moving on brings with it sadness. Yet moving on implies growing and should be viewed with enthusiasm and excitement. Therefore, let us not look lorzgingly at tlze pastg but rather, hopefully to ward tlze fu ture. Accounting Chitty. Anne B. I learned to trust myself to like people and to ork hard. Cotreau Susan M. When everything goes against you and it seems as though you cannot hold on a minute longer, never give up then, for tlzat is just tlze place and time that tlze tide ill turn. Cushman Elizabeth A. Life is too short, so I'm going to grab for all the gusto I can get. Geary, Joseph J. Quite frankly, I don 't give a damn. Jackson Jr. Jesses, Eight men thoroughly emerged in the struggle for the people is a far greater asset than eighty men with lukewarm enthusiasm. Lavalles. Paul A. The old love to give advice, to console tlzenzselves for no longer being an a condition to give bad examples. McCoy. Albert J. Most memorable moment: Starting college after I7 years out of school. Ouellette. Albert C. Learned accounting. Pierce Alden T. Most memorable moment: Meeting Gail in tlze darkest corner of the Rat. Rowles, Kevin M. Unborn tomorrow, dead yesterday, why fret about it if today be sweet. Schenker. Alison J. Learned to be a good and decent human being. ilihoxnas. John li. Those of you who think you .Afifnv everything are annoying to those of us nliit !-lily! Vaseonceio ?ciymond F. i'The whole world is cl bzmfnt Art History' Rezendes. Ardltlz 15. To understand the reason why we curfi this way...It's all a masquerade. Ann Frieh May I2 1977 Biology Agostino. Michael J. Vice president of Inner Space Society, Varsity Track. Ayash Lois J. To lose tlze earth you know, for greater knowing, to lose the life you have for greater life... Bednarz, Patricia A. Before you discover your handsome prince, you must kiss quite a few toads. Clarke, Donna J. I learned about life, survival and some academics. Connor, William P. Drosphila melanogaster Drown, Patricia J. Member Inner Space Society. Student Organizational Services Ferreira, Anthony C. Being a student is half academic and lzalf involvement in the university. helping it grow better for tlze students. Hartmann Dieter L. On tlze whole, I'd rather be in Philadelphia. Hill, Robin W. Crest la vie! Hilson James R. Some men see tlzings tlzat are and ask why I dream tlzings tlzat never were and ask why not. Morin Richard P. In wildness is the preservation of tlze world. Nawazelski. Joseph E. The complexity oflife under tlze microscope reflects tlze complexity ofour world. Regan Deborah L. Excuses are for wea klings ' '. Silipigni, Joan D. 'Know thyself Smith. Peter R. Most nzemorable moment: Becoming an All-American. VanDoren Kevin Most memorable moment: Posing as a frisbee thief Warner, Donald H. Involved in intranzural and varsity sports the lnner .Splut N V. 1UL'lt'LlL'ljTIUNS . . . . I' lr' It activities and studies. , 5 I A D l 0 u ' Civil Engineering H ' t.fl3 x1,.i5, 1' 1 Hartley, Joel D. .. eltoose this llni nlttnn .in ,, ,5,,,.,1 ,.,1,, ,U ,, you will serve... as for ine and ntl' lnntw, ll-if Lf,,,,,L, will serve the Lord. Josln1a 24:15 lutsgwlteel. .i.llllt's li 'x't.,,i H Chemistry Smith Scott D. Most tnetnorahle tnontenty Living in the Orange S watnp. Civil Engineering Technology Goldman Jeffrey M. Involved nz American Institute of Constructors. Civil Engineering Club DOC suite representative. Design Roberts Deborah A.' There are but three things that last: faith, hope and love. And the greatest of these is love. Sekelsky, Linda J. I sit beside the fire and think ofall that I have seen . Economics Chace, Mark A. should remind him that catastrophies can still happen and that modern society is not immune from the very greatest evils. Labrie Wayne R. I don't like the way the cards are shuffled, but yet I like the game and want to play. Medeiros, Francis J. I learned a new viewpoint and method of dealing with real world assztes. Electrical Engineering Bianchini, Michael J. From lzere to there, from tlzere to here funny things' are everywhere. Botelho John A. I gained a solid foundation for future career growth. Kasher, Barry W. Don 't force it. use a bigger hammer Podsiadlo James Thanks to John Greaves for encouraging individualism in his students. English Conlon Eileen W. l have eotne to know myself - strengths capabilities, weaknesses faults - better in the pastfottryears than in all mv nrpvintts life , l'lXt1lI nt.tl.. iNlLl5L'l'.tialllellllt' Xl fl ltttttltj f,,.,,,l'Aj , . llllllll. 1 lIllIN l lftlllllilf HAL x.t.1,1f xttgftjfl lllllllllvl' Pinto. l.llLIll.l R. lon uint lint Intl. nlnt, .VNU Hill' til 'inttr ftttxwwlttits fl lx ulpi tt ini, Hill' ul .i'o11r.wlt that ion trttli ,um Fine Arts Nllllllx George l'. lttiwliul nttlt ini tin. .nts tnajor. Finance Anderson William 'l. l.t i'ott'1'igot the lnlr. l'1'e got the titne. 'fs Burke. Paul C. 1'l1l'oll't'cllll lvcittg it sttnli nt French Murray Sheila A. Hll'L'f7l1.N'N this wut lint into Any good that l can do let ine ilo non. tor! will not pass this war again History Dinard. James J. The Iflotjr ot lmll, is n'.tn jltllni' alive. Houttnan Raymond J. t'tti-olrul tn the lilitr tl Student Lfttion h'lCC'Llllll7Cl'. Stephen .l. .llost tt.'ltnot'.iw'th tnotnentf The night l NlI'c'l1kul hlLlll'0OllL'b Nidllb lol: l llff HH! -1.L 'H HUM wltat ron Mill' lint l lletettll to tht lllattg lttltl right to Mill' tt H llliotles Dllllllllj li. ll1cI'r' 1111 'ff'j1'iWt . , , - lwecitztse lverlttlttollllttlllt1l'ljJtwI1fff1 Silxa Ciortlon .l. ln lttl itil rl .nm it .Xl11lilL'ut'xj .Inst .lm nllt ,1'o1tt'tut'c'11f'l M! H17 Industrial Relations fllatltleii. CilI'1slUllliel' llI1'trll'ul its ltvlt lin l't'est'u1'ttt out the lttclztstmtl RC'lt1lttttt,x Club Vipon George W. The courses lzere are only Corbett' Patricia A. YOUYW got IO pay your as interesting as the instructors. dues and carry on. DeCampos, Wesley T. Doubt is the key to MATH knowledge. Ameen Ann M. I gained a deeper D . D .d NWI ,, understanding of myself and learned to use esmamls' aw B' lat a bumper man assets to better myself Barckett. Joseph A. 'You laugh' Mechanical Engineering Mechanical Engineering Whitney Gary S. Involved in tlze American Society of Mechanical Engineers, Senior Citizens Clzristmas Party and Little Peoples Weekend. Marketing Cederholm, Edward A. 'Qeverything that ever has been always will be, and everytlzing that ever will be always has been Episcopo Dennis B. Involved in Campus TV News, Track and Cross Country Furgal, Patricia J. The important thing is this: to be able at any moment to sacrifice wlzat we are, for wlzat we could become. Hurwitz Philip H. Do wlzat you want to do, and do what you feel. 'i Kroszner, Russel R. My tastes are simple. I like to have the best. Leconte, Kenneth A. Learned how to drink seriously. McNamara Patrick J. Nil Aon Teintean Mar Da Teintean Fein lThere is no place like home! Ndi. Teke N. Education should be as gradual as the moonrise, perceptible not in progress but in result. Santos David J. Such is life. MN lkianageniient Bailey Donna ifways leave them laughing. Bragga George W. 1 mast pass. Cabral. Joseph T. 'Fed 1 'i that your life shall come to an end, but eff that it shall ifeverr are a beginning. Doherty Robert F. Tlzere is no Eden or heavenly gates that you ire going to make it to one day. But all the answers you seek can be found in the dreams that you dream on the way. Donaghy. Michael E. Do otlzer men for they would do you Folsom. Robert M. The best things in life are not only free, they are unexpected. Fournier, Maurice P. Most memorable moment: Graduation FOw1er. Iitiwzmi In neecla nzan. I wil! mffp' ' Giummulvo Stem-.1 xi, 'q,,,A,',1.,,., , looks. l1wl'C111'IfIflIg Inkts f,,4,,q,,t expect, and llfkllfl-Vlfllvlig f,,,, QU HMM., H at the worsf possible fnonzvnf. l 1 .N Gilchrist, Paul A. Making fkiends, learning. Gonsiewski, Jerome A. I learned SZll'1'I'l C1f business background and k'now!ea'ge Hickox James M. Most nzenzorable HIOIIICIIIQ Watching SMU ski instructor Bob Shen gm instructions on Iiferalh' lzifffng inc' tives. Kaulins. Peter K. I CLINIC Imp fo gm' an education with mine and infra slfncwfvtl, Kwok Peter Ek! 1. i fcurizcd .zhozf f independence, fllllflllilliff. c!fa!f'efzgt', c2'fs:, z'5v,f1'm3 ,1 11' P' 1 , , , , N.:gt.1I Ii..-I , I ,fjfy -1 Xllllfx Xt.1Ir. f 1 Unk! Rlixt' IJCIIIIIN Ni 1! , Ullltflltlllflll tint Sslmtix 1.111 I U, X Ilia! z1111'111c!!1',quf1f fn llll fp u'ul'kx. lluflllkzunm I f , , , 11111-4 ll cl! lift I SLllllUs.SICPl1t'llH U N Hur I .Skjlvlll C'l'L'Llll'l1!! llt H Ill: H ' fl Jwllll fflllllllljf 1 own walt and fm people, So LIBLI. Stone .loscph I lfn oj'drc'un1s, Vat as III CV1' CYII Will .I. ousiou Pele: J 1 c1l'c' Ulla! ask Nfl f in 1' 1'1 L Vkulluec. SlL'PhL'l'l I Wflclf lim lvuufw Q npurvd In Wflll I1 itzms. Slcpln sflzpid as an udmtzl L lf1I'1IkQflc' was mlm tn YIHI U1 I H0011 .lCl'l'l'Cj .I U1 wnn' Inu nn! nt 1 1 mwncll llclwxmi lf Q N Snllx l IN 1 I' cfm ' fflc' X!4l c uf: Hz! I 1 1 4 umvx I f Multi Disciplinanx Siu B11 Suzztzlu .lomw .. D fun! H XIAIVUII Row Ulmer l Lzgum' K X X 1 t WIIHIIN4 HK uf'.'.1 1 L t tfrwic'.i!'.'.l14 IH. X ' -vvwvvfli .ISN 3 L A' S-. I hf4 ,g,!NiS!j,y . 129-J llilresident of SMU, Dr. Donald DC. Walker presents Sister Madeleine Vaillot, retiring Dean of the College of I urging, an award of recognition for her past services to SMU, while Dean of Faculty, Richard Fontera oo s on. Nursing - Bertrand, Rachel A. Ijust can 't wait till it 's all over. Brooks, Sharon A. You give but little when you give of your possessions, it is when you give ofyourself that you truly give. Burr, Lynne A. In my tlzoughts and dreams I can see beyond into a sky hill of starts and choose a way tlzat leads to peace. Colwell, Richard P. Oh Shit! Dore, Jeanne M. So long as enthusiasm lasts, so long is youth still witlz us. U Frieh Ann L. Happy are those who have found themselves. Hendricks, Barbara A. Involved in the Student Senate, University Curriculum and College of Nursing Curriculum Committees. Long. Heather J. There has to be a better way. Minassian. Diana S. HBA' the time IOHIOFFOW comes, it is today. 'X Nadeau Janine N. Tit: more faithfully you listen to the votre mtiziu you, the better you will hear what is 1 .f'w:'in2 outside. And only he who listens can .ya I Reid Sharlene A. YL iio.iule1' is the first step in learning. Roffo, Cheryl A. I have learned that to be with those I love is enough. PORTUGUESE Cabral, Helena T. On that threatening moment when man 's educational process is terminated, so too is his education. Political Science Barbieri, Peter R. No problem. Digiacomo Christine M. You to the left and I to the right, for the ways of man must sever. And it may be for a day or night, and it well may be forever. U Eaton. Jean M. Most memorable moment: Long talks in the amphitheater, Fall 1974. Greneon Deborah K. A lover of wit and admirer of confidence. Khoury. Thomas Life is the basic ingredient ofall mankind. Laney Michael J. Learned self discipline and the ability to accept folks for what tlzey are. McAndrew, David SMU taught me what life in the real world is not, and in the process, how to put up witlz it until the day comes when 1 can implenzent the needed clzanges. Saba, Annemarie I111111I1'111' Association, SfIIClC'lll ,S'1'11111+ Sheehan. Sheila 'll T11111'1w11-1 11.11111 Psychology Befbefiam Susan S. I 11111111 111111 I 111111- wisdom. lfeel a11d 1 Icnoiv. Cooney, Kathleen J. Active 111 lflljljltl 1S'1'g11111 P11i, IFC and SOS. Corwin, Rand S. I've learned Cl 11'e111e11111111s amount about people, myself. and 111111 1,1 you 're willing to work 11ard you can Sl1C'C'l'C'Ll at almost anytlzing. Fontaine, David L. Involved in the fl'1IC'l'1lg IQLIWZ. FOur11ier, Ann H. Bigotry lnegm unlzappiness. Guilbert, Morris P. Most memorable 1lIO11161ll'.' Ending an oasis of sanity amidst the madness of class registration. Lassonde, Claire L. I learned how to get all education in spite of the lack of laboratory space, library books and overcrowded classrooms. Love, Nancy M. The greatest kindness we can give each other is the trutlz. U Macedo. John S. Involvement with people is always a very delicate thing - it requires real maturity to become involved and not get all messed up. 1' Masse, Henri R. The song and t11e silence in the heart, tlzat in part are prophesies, and in part are longings wild and vain. Monsour, Maryanne Wave of sorrow do not drown me nowf 1 see the island, still ahead sonzelzow. I see the island and its sands are fair. Wave of sorrow, take methere. Rogers, Linda S. My future plans are to teach elementary school, preferably teaching children with special needs. Rosenthal, Barbara E. Most memorable moment: Moving into the dorms as a freshman. Sandler, Shelley A. It is not how lllllflfl we have, but how much we 611-1'O,l', 111111 ll1CIliC'.N' happiness. Shaker, Ann Marie Besides acade11111's, 1'1'e learned to accept and live in 11 111'oi'lc1'f111'lf1J people witlz opposing viafws and c111.1v1'1'f'24'C'S- I V1 , NM.-1.1 l1.1.1.:.x 1,11 NCHNIZI lL'Nlg'l lx fL'I1., , Sociology .XlllLll'1l. Slllllff Nl 1111111 1. 11.1111 1'1111111111 111 11111111111 111111111111 .11 11,11 , b. A. Cllanrllil. li11ll1.1I.1 li llllll 11111 1111111 1'-1 111 11111's1'11. 11111 1111111111 I11,u111 1111111111 lfrf- ' 1 - 1 - ' Litas. lD11x11l1111111111I111111 111 1 11 111111111 llcon lNi111'1'.I. l'11111' 11 111x1 Kallcxik. Dorolliy .llilllvl 11111111-.1 ,ll l'1-1,111-.1111 111111111 111111 l'1i'111111j1' '1111' ljlillfl 1111 111'11'11u1 11.11 1.1 and 1111d1'1'.s11111111111g Macahcllo Susan R. l'1111 111111111 111 111 11111 111L' 411111. Madeira. Nancy J. 1 I1'111'111111111'1'1111111111':11 1 opi1111111.s'. Najarian Jcllrcy P. I 111111-11111 111111 11111111111111 ll l111f7Ul'fCl111, 11111 s111111I11 11111 1111111111-11111 1 nllllllll to 11111111 .11-1111 111111 C'lt'L1I'l-l' Pacheco Gail A. l11'11.x1111111111 1111111 1111111-1 6'Cl1'1lll1g.S'U1I1C 1'11'1111ji' lfll' 1111111111'111I St.John Jr.. lgdward lf. i-Xflljlllll-L' 111111.-1111 lx alien to 111e. Thutlow. Gloria J. .1111111111111111111111111:111111111 Slxlllglll lflllllflt' 111111 11111 Kllllliliflflll 11111.' pro vided . Vclzlrclllcf. l1Llll11l'il11 llosl 11:11'.111'.1'1'11 llIO11IC'1I1.' I.1111' .S'111111111111 . 1111 11111 I 11:11 Cl1I'l.S'1l1IcI. Textile Design Paulllctlc. llClWOI'Llll ID. 111 1111111 11'111 11' 11 1'c'ci'1'c'111c1l 111'1'1' 111111 111'1'1' 11211111 Rcllf. l,lllklLl Ni. 1.1111'111'11 11 1111 111111.11 Lll 'M 11111113 11'1111111'f'11lc'11N 11111 11N .hill f11111111l111L'1 1 . 1 ' l1'Ill11c'1'clI11!Q1'1111I11111111 111 11215 ll'-1111' Tcxlllc Engineering Sixxile .l1nn1's L . 111111'11t111'111111111 - 111111' 111 11'1111!f11 X III 41'Ll11't1111'1N 'B L111'1'1'1' 1 5' Q. ii?-. ' 5 . W Q plnifa Jfrfyifnv-. Textile Management O'Neil. Mark T. 1 don 't believe you. Textile Technology Alves, Bruce Don 't confiise me with the facts, my minds already made zip. Boulos. Florence B. Age is a matter of mind, and ifyozi don 't mind it a'oesn 't matter. Brunelle. Stephen M. Involved in Phi Psi. American A ssociation for Textile Technologists, Textile Club. Etchells. Marc D. Member of Infamous Green Swamp. Maresca. Joanne M. lt is not how much we hare, but how much we enjoy. That makes happiness. lleasc. Thomas M. President ofAA TT, Phi Psi Afl't'1fL'i'iilI'.l'. Servais. limi ll. i!i1ppy are those who dream dreams anti im' l'c'CZLl-1' to pay the price to make thcin is ti'1ie. 'A Marketing Briss, Nancy M. It is only with the heart that one can see rightly, what is essential is invisible to the eye. Psychology Barrett, Barbara K. 'Remember yesterdayg Learn from it, Bat don't live in it. Sociology Ferreira, Michael Some men see things as they are ana' say 'why?' I dream of things that never were and say 'why not? ' Med Tech Bailey Virginia S. Life is a risk! Wlflv 7' V' 'fa' 47' ':::-f-f:fi??! 'H-99'-s -'ffl-6' ami Smnmn llaris N' hlwlm llvslirisrn BSU ANQUET Sunday, June 6, was quite an eventful evening for members of the Black Student Union. At their 3rd .-Xnnnal Graduation Banquet, they presented certificates of merit to the largest BSU graduating class 133 Buchclrir degreesn in the history of SMU. The banquet was attended by approximately 300 people. which included BSL' members. lamilx friends and members of the SMU community. ' In addition to the graduate awards, eight members of the greater Southeastern Massachusetts Connnuniry were lauded for their outstanding contributions to the Black Student Union and greater community. Newly elected Student Government President, Manuel Tiny', 'i Fernandez served as the Master ul Ck-reinonies and was assisted with the presentation of awards by BSU President Dorothy Riggins. The awards included: Faculty Award: Professor James Toatley, sculptuor in the Art Department. Community Award: Jack Custodio, Community Developer, Minority Coalition of New Bedford. WEB DuBois Award for Academic Excellence: Manuel F. Tavares, former BSU President. Senior of the Year: Michael J. Laney and Jesse Jackson Jr. Alumni Award: Carol Pimental 76 received Master's Degree one year after receiving Bachelors Degree. Special Award: SMU Chef Joe Andrews for his many contributions to the BSU. The Senior Speaker Can honor bestowed upon him by the senior elassl was Eduardo Velafquef. who is il.. urs: member of the BSU to be accepted to Law School: Northeastern. Temple and Duquense Uinversnies ro nanie .i lee.. The Graduation banquet seeks to commemorate black scholarship and to honor the Aeadeniie Lleftllllllllsllllltllls .is well as the extra-curricular contributions of the graduating BSU members. This year's banquet was acclaimed the most successful to date and plans are underway lor the Cqlllss ol' 'S graduation banquet. CHOLASTICACHIEVE ENTA WARD Textile Textile Veterans Association Honor Award Harry Riemer Honor Award Northern Textile Association American Association for Textile Technology Award Uunior Membership in AATTD American Association of Textile Chemists Phi Psi Honor Award Chemistry Fred E. Busby Award for excellence in Chemistry Analytical Chemistry Award Kenneth L. Business Wall Street J ouranal Student Achievement Award Industrial Relations Club Service Award Engineering Mechanical Engineering Award for Academic Excellence Mechanical Engineering Technology Award for Acadmic Excellence John E. Foster Award for Excellence in Civil Engineering American Society of Civil Engineers Eta Kappa Nu Service Award Thomas M. Pease Marc D. E tchells Brace Alves Albert K. Heywood Robert C. Busch Bruce Alves Beverly Bendiksen Vieira, Class of 1978 Dean M. Corcoran Martha G. Falconer Betsy Finch James W, Adams Kyle A. Sandahl Michael E. Sarrasin Paul R, LaFrance David Kenyon Wallace Schuback English Augustus Silva Award Martina A. Matthiessen Psychology Professor Rudolph LaVault Award Francine A, Campeatl for Excellence in Psychology Therese A. Melanson HIGHEST SCHOLASTIC STANDING College of Arts and Science Deborah Catlow College of Business and Industry James E. Holding College of Engineering james W. Adams College of Fine and Applied Arts Bai'r'3.f W. VanDusen if oliege of Nursing Sharon A. Brooks 3.990 3.84 3.99 3.970 3.94 W H095 WHO N AMERICAN UNIVERSITIES D COLLEGES William Thomas Anderson Sharon Ann Brooks Sharon Danielle Brown Deborah C. Brownell Claire-Marie Butler Mary Elizabeth Carrier James Russell Castleberry Donna J. Clarke Christine Marie DiGiacomo Robert Francis Doherty Jr. Anthony C. Ferreira Jr. Ann Frieh Mary Gillen Wayne Gisherman Barbara Ann Hendricks Timothy L. Hoffman Michael J. Laney Paul O. McGinn Steven A. McGrath Ronald A Magnant Joyce Mandell Thomas Tunbosun Osobu Curtis E. Pollitt Sheila T. Sheehan Peter David Vatousiou Eduardo Velazquez Francis P. Ward : ' 'fxf 2'-, - IDN ' ...CM -I , A ,Q 4r35f.-ik ..-,.:4 ,f-?P't:ff J5f.fi. ',Lg,?ly4,,Q 1A.:.y,:Q 'wb - ' ff :sfignfgai 1 .'3f:4t-. 5 V4q:'c M w V.'.g'f-P11 .fe !'.f.w',f, . . ,f f,.1fgefqQ3E2Zff,'-ml ' V - fm. Q 1 . A,,..,-!J',,-,LV ngzw. , .- 1, -1'- - V' V .42 ny. , ,' f, .jzigi ,fi 4,4315-'fp-z f .XY ,Q ,-v 153, n,..,4sg,'9-,. . - Jl,V.?, leximgfinw , H f ff::f?TMf:f f4:',!,Vl,:fP1a'V Ja 4 - 1!v FJIMM- 1- 'pf-Q2 hlzwgff w., J -'Iv' - ,v ,. V-'.,.. -.pn V V - 4,. ,vrif ' C- , .-.V ,114 x--, -.,' mfg. 3. ' V .,,11ff,V.1. , . wiffff-ff.: 11' - , 1f?:'T?,L,i.1::-'Zf.55.ff- 1 f V - ,'l,,1'432y:1-i',a-QJV'5--' wa ' - ri A-xi' f',w-2f1If..- 4'-V: ' I VY 4 1'-7' f V 'IV-' V, 4- , - fx' - fw1'F i?5'1,i'i '1VT.g5.f Sz :Q-2 ld' 'A an -.ff-fr!-, f:.ef21f-fwv 5 ' V ' V f':4-'I-.-f1.e.v'f::'f-.ww.-:-ff. k 'V f'445f:r?f- 'YZ3 ' . Lyn :EV 'f i H I-2 21 5.'?, 5Ze.f'Jf'VE1f'f if sf V. -V 1' - gf3'-Lyf'?i'2f53z :CgC?iii nz f V- , em, ,Vg-ff 5.-3.,-,-:' I.,-5 -.15 V - r -f' Vx. I-. ' ..',s.4v j r:,4625 ,U 'N' y . :5w'Sw1iVfsf'?'f:.vwa.VfV-f,f,:ff-V. ,W V ,grim 1' A- , ,, L,Q:'I ei?igg422rgj'2.f ' V . 2.1,-. ,V , - -, - :V ,- ..f.- V-1'f-z3 :,,Mq.,.s:,.u:ie1:,.,A4 :sae-' ' I-,-r . Cf - -,f Q a- ..- s 11 .'-'T'.7:'p5-.-.3:'9-,' 1 G:-2 U Q ' .1 f' gl . ' ., 4, I, 1512 .- gin V. - '- fd, A' V ' 7Qf'!'5f fi-QQ,11?vg1gg:1i5ea?fTif5':?5'VP, ffm-. ' ' . fwfr. :'.L .'-51 g,L:,VVi-2 mf. Q-:Vp-1-.3-'V Y- ' r A :,:e.'1.'fg'V rj, j':f3:::.,':.,.,:,-'ijy ,cf ., 1 'Q 5 - ,,.. V fav- , -Q--, . f , . ?5 a'!if3f5:V . , - - 5?g,:::1:.-1q,- V , vu K . 1 ,,l'l A .N QQWQS2 - .... , ,-nl. . ,. .. .4 -fx :'- r -' .., 7, ', r. .VL.- . -. . ,., .,..lm W ... I 'Y .- - Af 'lov 'N ,- W 4 . .-., . n 1 A 1 I - f ,,-1 . ' .25 Aww .',fv! , , f. 113.4 VI'-4' ,120 Mlff- , 1 my. , .fr JA' ,. :rv . RCBERTPCTTS 1 x J DIED r . . 4 ..'. - - ' Q w'-' ' f-1 Avica H f A 1751 fzrfzmnffnue ssvw vias- 'uve-.sl1s.rJP 45-15211- The theme of the 1977 yearbook is involvement, we, the staff and myself spent well over a year in efforts of capturing that involvement here at SlVlU.The end results lthis bookl reflect not our abilities but the involvementt and the lack of it here at SlVl U. lwould like to thank .... A.V. Dept. Administration Taylor Pub. Co. John Levis Arni Lohman Ann Frieh Nestor Suarez Delinda Rosa lVlrs. Baldwin SIVI U Telephone operators Ann George Bill Gathwright Torch office personell and anyone who may have not been mentioned .... qi John Lopes editorf-fin A-chief W..-.........,.. W: 'fb v 4 ,aw --.,.,mNx w.,.,,MM' 'wm.,,N.M, .QA 'ax Nmhm Ruth Davis managing Neditor 'vga ii? ,gi-. -W Ed Lomax photoweditor 1,53 1 , ., .- 1 1, , 1 ?1 ,P - ff --' 1 al 1 1 1 1 1. 1 1 1 1 - 4 1 1:11 1 1 1 11 ,. Q' .. ., 1 ,s , XXX XX X X 1 1 , ., XX XX . 1 X J11 . XX., ,X .1X.X X. :XX ,Xi.XX , 1- X 9u,5,X1: - X 'f , 1 -X 11'l,,. X W H' J ' ,, , X7 'f- ,' 11 X- X X , X X X X ,AX X. . ,, X . . X, XX , W1 1 -1 1 1 1 ' 5. ' . 121212111 11 mf tif , 4 a ' ' '. ,lk ' '1' I -J - X '- ' 1. ,N A2 X' .-- . .11 u . 11 , - , 1 ' - , , X' . N1 - ,,,, Q f4,,1'P-X ,A 3. ff 11 1 1 ll, .' V-. uf' 2'1 n , --- n W I' ' ' an X ' 'I lv ,5 . ., ' , , , 1 X111 XX -1 - ,-. . X -1 -11 fl. ., I, ,X -1.1 X 1 X1 ,FIX X , T ,, - 5 XX AXX'Xf1,j - X. XX Xujzw XX X 1 X 1 X X 1 -X , .. ' . ,, 11 1-. ,111 o X X, - .-.L - L.-X4 X kd . X X X X X , fr .,,X nf. X , Z , ,X 2,1 lr H, . X ,, 11 1 ,XX . - 3 .X fs rig . , .X,X Xn.: , ,' 2 . Y 111 ' ., - 1 .0 7.1 11 X X4 ' vm .1 ' 11 1- X - 2: X , 1 X X X, , , 5 71- ,X IX, XX A ,, XXVHXXX 1 XX AX XX XX XX XX 1. XQX, -:AXA '. 1 1, f ' X X ' : X 11 , 511 X 1' X. . ':. - ' ., ,X X ,' 1 X - , 24 -' I- X.: 1 '1 X- X43 ,If XX :XX X il -X H.: , .,- ,-y.-MX! - X' -gi. X, ,Xp ,.'X '- X , 1 -X 115 .5 11-' 35' 1 'k ' , X X 4 , X731 , I ,Q V ' 1 ' 1 1 -1 .. 1 .L . 111 1 .1 1' , .ff ' ' 51 1 V 1-cf...1 Y 1, I ' .L '51 off f Q6 W'w'T , X X, ,+A V' - s , W9 gs' 11. :.-. 1 .J ,f!. r. 1- , . , ., -'54, -11.3 if, F1 ' 'ALQX 'ASQ T, WH. 9, X' 1 .: 2 . ' ., 1' , wg 11 .XX Xl . lux Q .G 1J-mv nys, ie. ip , ' -6 ' IT- V ff ' , 4. -,, 1 ' : 3 E 0 . 1 f1' 1 2' 0 Q rw-fd' ' g X,,1,.f,lVr f f sem... 1. - .qu X -- 1- x,.- .q 'H 'X 'W' A af? no -Q 'F MB- A 'Y A J .1 1 Q' cc,-X, . ' 1 : .XL XX,,uQ,, 1-1- 35?-5. I R, , 13. 11.1, v .5 ..., mb, 1' 4 .mx v fm . -' 4-I Xyv X , lyjf'-J 1 1 , , 1 fgny XXX ,- 1 , in X ,. yr.. X 1, 1 1- J, , X Q. .?'1'.gl:'iQ' .W 'A ' 15 'A' ff L , , ,XX-r.,X .. 'Qi' 'Wm ,. , 13, 3 34? C L7.'5?'3f - 4'-5: 1 ' A ' -1, 1 A , 1 . 1-11 1 4 ww ffm f1.1f1-11fff 1'WW' 1 1' 1, 1 , .NO , XX X- 11. 5 ... ,f , ,- Q 1 1 , -X7 X1 , X -1 1, 1 1 ,- ,, v 1 H 1 1 , , -' 1 1 , 1' , Z, ' ,VX .. , 1 5, X : 1 ..',,, A V ,:3X1,,, 1 . XX: , X L-1 1 f 1 1 'ff Aff 1 . . . I' Q -, ' , 11 1 1 I 11 ' ,-1115' wr . ' 1 J .fl '- ',.1 51 1 ,T .1 iz 1. 1-1-X-im 'ag ,li f '1 :Eg 1 ' , X ,X ,X XO: . ,, 4 . 'r X , Q gf 11- :ag 'X - - - .f . , K- ,X X XXX 1 -15X 1 1 1 1 1 X X 1- 1 , -X A X H: I ' 41 ' 1. . A ', U V -. , , . XX X X , ' T -ff 1 fi 1 f 1 in , I. I 5, V 1 vu Y 11 1 . X , 2X ' f , ,. 4 'V f 1 1 3 , 0 :IN XX , , , . , 1 X - , 1 ,x ' r-ff 1' , ,, -, Y., V' 1 1 1, -. 1 ,. G -1-1. fbi.. :pf , , Q. -Uni 1. N' f xx ,-!'Y.., ,, f .,w-',- f' 3 ,V 5.. 'zswfof' L ,M n-,vw 1-11, ur .qc 1: w'y,i51:. '. X Y 51. i. '- I Us , ,- . , , A .. -5, i In , ',- Mf, , I V uf.-i W -- ,.. ,, .4' A , F: - ,rgf vs lr - .-Diggs ji- -1, ' f,fQ' I Q' N Q V .SK Q zz - 'A'-2 Ti . 'Ml ' mf 3 f' M -K 5 -' - 3 1 . -..-. u r. . - 1 5 5-.,,-4 I, yu. . - ' V 'I - I Li- ,, I r g ' '-.,' 1. ' J, '... ' . ' ' - , 'grim -,, V9 , V Ine z.. W , , .f- '1 4 M -- L, -. .. 4 ' v .fun . 4: -. - ' J - 1 '.- . - .0 ' ' 1' 7 ' ' l. U . ' ... - - f ' ' -, ,' '. QL ' ' Qu 51 C 0 q o 1 ' ,'.n' X ' 1 -:l:'.-. ' 2, 0 , W A 4 H lv, ' u ' . I, 5 me I ' I V' ' v n- , -'O' , KF ' . Iv,j 'l.' . ' 0 . ' 'f PA- 1. ' MQW X Y ' - Q H Q -A . , ' -0 0 x . in O ', r 4 L .- x, ul W.-z- ' .1-lv! J .J 1-wr.. . vnnlionw. 1 N 7 1 J: '- -, - l I Hi, JG I , fifwt. a - ....,, s, , , ' T Q . ii ,F X ' TW 'N will xv. 5' .I ' JL ,. ' -1:1 -Q D , ,V ,Lg.'.,'5,. .. :'!r2e,4-+F .N ffg' . ...4 ITV, 4 '-,,.5f ,f '- 1 fr Q ' 5 241 ' 4' ' ' ' 'Ls Q4 5 A Ngvrxq w ,,., kt ns- . .- 3, Y f pn f:.u'fL!3'ya5', 04' K .' Q O .. , k ' if V 2-:fm 675' ef' I Q L :S,Qgp5,:-L' . - ff Aj-.v7'Q','fuz. ,-fi ,Q-: if-Q1-gf: .r ',S55,1a -Q-.- f:',:g. V ' f'7'.gf1'f Jf' kt 4,j1':', - 1 ,f . .,fn.ff-..1.4- ' 1-A-ffw ? -, li' -iih ,sw-2-11 5 ia -1 n, 1 5.94.51 fe 3, 29 Le: wings, 5. ,f?:p.'-'+ 2.4 V- 'H -25.1 :fmt-.,:5fQ,,.-,-Qpf - ., uf- .' ..--.,-:yf.Q.,:,u,'-,jf v , . , ' - ff Y-f -f, - .g. N i in-.?:f,.-' . Y. -' 1' :lil J' ik 1 V ' -2 21,5 f- f ,X 4:-,illgggffziv YT? ' ' ' ' 93:35-5,-gu..:. .1 .1-, . ,Q ,Lg K ' f - 2:-. v-:w'? '-F:'fN A1z: :-- '-H5 l-'T f A g2 - 1:1 1 1- 2.3 P in 0' 5, sw., in S, , 1 w QQ! :P Q . g 'A Q H ,. ,,, - - . I , if . wk, .1,,,,'., 5 1g..1 QQ 47' F it ind 'Q Q 'Q if A 'Q' W 5 H- S 1:5 gl 9 ,,. , .: A , - . h - l ug Q y A. 1 - . fl ' ', h QQ. - N' g Y' 14 -'iff-vi . V, ,A rx , , N 5 .,' 'g L Y , -V . '-.' j, at . - :fe - -Q .115 , - 1 sf - 1 . U if tl . ,fbuik-.' - .'i.7l'f F 'A ,wif -lf'f:,u'15-f3'.f','f'4 1 'A f A ,' -, - -'.'t1,- Lg,-'Qf ,.', r'-q'- .figcfa 2 ' 6 43- , .55 g'.---.'I- 5531332 -liL.'f1ffTf,bQ 1 ' ' 1 ' - 'P P L 5 Aft' . 1-1: Li'--iff' ' - - V ' - .e QW '1 1 ' ' fwii Q' 5, ,i , E 5'-f O a vi - ' -, I : ' 1 f. 9. fr, ' , x 'af xg.--4 5 1. nfs- s?'- S. ' 7, s ' 'X 44 33 1 5. 3' 'JG fa M' ' QA Q - ' -A W ', ' . . Q 1 .7 Q 5 Q .tg I l Q 1 I ' 'lx S :qt I qmgz ' X2 -. ','i'.' , -, ' , 'I fo 1 ,gy 'g Q ,- fl '11 ,Q-jk 'g gf... 04' . -. 1 4 E QW- 'S 57. - I -o 5 I v, fn, W eh Uv eonldec N599 XNQKCO SW X14 Koedxoxd, QQXO 002 WN 3 5934 Qixdixqq ex 55.014 55 QQ'Jfb.Cb'X 'Jo 6 P ag tt time few MI involved i 'ith an its ..,,etit'g lik OORE X. SLATER? Well, SMU students and graduates are part of the staff at Moore 8t Slater, for onething. The president of Moore 8 Slater teaches advertising and marketing courses at SMU. Two staff members of Moore St Slater are pursuing a Masters in Business Administration at SMU through the agency's Educational Assistance Progriiri- ANU Moore 43 SluitfrtIg1IIf1IiS-'.ttIi- advertising for SMU's Dl'JlLuIf1II of Continuing Studies, The relationship between SMU and Moore 8 Slater Isnt talk Its the kind of activeinvolvement which ought to oefound oetween auniversity and its local business community. It helps us all. VIUICODCOD W 'B O Q S I S S. Q S Q O S o ADVERTISING PUBLIC RELATIONS MARKETING RESEARCH 271 Union Street, Downtown New Bedford, Massachusetts 02740 I617I 996-3946 Compliments of 1 4 Apartment Rentals in Dartmouth and Nou- Bed orrl IIII f tit xittiwrxi , I I ' 4' it Ixiittxx I Nt, i ,yu S ,.W W 4 ,A . N l M u I . ' N ' - 6- - I i,'f55..QfI . ' If. qi: - Y..,,,,.S,, , I hi ,I-l14....I I- S .- 0 1- ,S I 0 SECLUDED COUNTRY ATMOSPHERE 0 SWIMMING POOL 9 I -2 and 4 ROOM FURNISHED APARTMENTS 9 T. V., RADIO and TELEPHONE 9 AIR-CONDITIONED 9 CONTINENTAL BREAKFAST 9 REASONABLE RATES T ke Exit 'I7 on T95 East, Reed Road E Exif I8-S going West. 571 Stale Road I No. Dartmouth, Mass. on R e 6 - One Mile West of Dartmouth Mall on Rt, 6 Tel. t6I7I oormeeoa . F?'I '4 In E' Special rates for SMU students OAFJIUI The A I I F EIHVIUI 5 if ffffirrrztirig lijluss S1977 BYRON R FORD, JR. JEWELERS 206 Rockdale Ave. New Bedford 999 5647 ervice ' ystemSe Q o 9 o Q ' Lofzgrafo io f NornmNvZaHand Besf Wishes I from The Campus Cenier and Board of Governors u Learning never ceases. , Q Limfnwaufh hair Complimenfs ofa friend ONGRATULATICNS AND GCJOD LUCK FROM THE YEARBOCK STAFF OF I977 CONGRATULA TICNS FRO T E FEAQULTDYI ND ADMINISTRATION PHUT O lg ll John Lopes pgs-67,49,10, 16,19,20,30,31,32.34.-1011. Eddie Lomax pgs-1, 4, 5, 12, 13, 22, 23, 38. 39, 47. 54. 64 Kathy Gleason pgs-14, 20, 24 Jean lVlcBaron pg. 17 Sharon Blagdon pgs-56, 57, 58 Athletic Dept: all sports photos Theatre Co. pgs-28, 29, 70 Joe Jeffery pgs-14, 15, 53 Senior Portraits inc.-Senior Portraits -And to all those we may have forgotten. Layout and Design-John Lopes The Eool: assisting in Layout and Design- Ed Lomax and Si'ldi'5i i -. -. . , 5 'll I I , I.f, . f I V 1 K J- gf, In 1 X I 2? I r ik ..1 x , I I I P 1 ' . .r- X I v N . l ' 'VIN 1 1 1 s ' 1 - I u C I F . . 1 J L . ,T 5' K . '. I F . S- 1 I , 1 . I J 4- -V , I .I 1 1 J l , 'Q 5 , X iQ . ,. , 4 Q V . nl T A ' 9 ' l .- Q ' . K X 4 I Q 4. 1 . I w Y mv 5 N J N Y - ' 5. ,Y -r' s A . X 1 xl V , , I Lux y 6 , A f' I Q is V .J J 1 . M' X, X 'iff , K . 4 N n. 57 7 1 1' , 1 4 Y 1' ' '- N .1 J X 0 O I L M, , fh ' 9 I 1 1 4 X V 1 r . x ,L Q. 1 S 4 5 , - r ' ' Fri-' , - ou '- ' - I . I 1 1 4 96' C ' n X v A-VA L. I I 4 S ,5 ' I 4 I ' 1 r.- u ,' ,- I, o Q-v 1 . f ' -. f , x f 1 1 .! I L S Y L x w . ,X 1 11 1.1 1 ...111'111,.1.1 .1 . Q I1-,44g1'11111 . 1 X 1' , 1171.1 J . , 1. I 1 11. 1 1 . ,-Th. --1: ' ' '51 .1 ' 1 I I 1 47 41 . , ll' K , , 1 .1 11' 1 1 1' 1 -f. 15 1' 1 1 1 1.1, ' 1'-z . ' .1 I., 1 .1 1 I A I 1 11, .lil I I fi V -1111 -1111111 1 1 1 11 1 111' 1lzE'1fQ!,-'., 1 , :fain Yu ' ' 1111 I'f 1' ' ll' .i.1 -. . 1 '-hf1.-ffmQ.7 - FII. 11 s, .1 . l l 1 1 ,a I 1 1 1 1 Y 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 .1 1 1 1 . 1 2 1 1 1 'vi WM . 1 ., 11 1,' i I 11 4 ' ' 1 J T-41 I 1 ' 13 1 1 ., . 1 X .1 ' 1 1 I ' 1 1 ,- ' .111 1 1 1 1 7 11. 1 1 1. -Xa ' ., 1 H ,gy 1511, 1' ' 1 .11 ' Q 1 ' -'c ' 1. -Z- U11 Vg I .I do u 1 V 4 '--'KKK ' 114 ' 1 1 'L V 1. M 1 , ,I .. 11 1 1 1 li. fc. 11 s U 1 1. 11 'A N UH 1 'fnf , . 1 R D I V Ill. .,, A 1. I I 1 1. H 1 1 ' 1 1 41 111' 1 . 1 1 'L 1 ' -L 1 A . , 11, ,Iv ,A I x, 11 .H ' '91 11, V - v C .E 1. It ' 1 1 1 .1 .. ' ' , I ll 1 D N ' .14 .1' 1 131 I. o 1. , . 4, Q is A .M ,, 1 1 '-1 1 1 ' 11 '- 11 1 11 11 1 1 1 11 1 1. 1'1' 1 1'111' 1 1. 1- ' -1 1 1'. A 1' J 1 , .. b , 'I Y. 111, 11.1 1 4 1.51 I . 1- 1 ,. 1- .1 1, ,vu 1 1. J i H ' 'Y' ' . 0 ' O I , l - -1 ' ' X 31 -V '11 ' 1 'E'Qf'-va .rd U 1' 1.1 ' 1 ' 1 1 11 1 F ,, . ' . I , 1 9 1 1 ff ' 1 1- 1. 1' ' 1- .' '-1+ . 1 1 1 .1 - -1' 1 . af-1w5:,1' ' ' ,., 4. H U 1 1 111,' 1 1.11 11 1 , 111: 1' U 1 1. ,. 1 1- ' 1 ' ' o . 1 1. ' WA- 1.1 11 111- ' 'n -iz' QU' 51. nk' 1 1' 1 1 1 :- - .1 11, 1 , 1 4. 1- r ,1 h we ' 1, L, 4 ' I. I X 11: . 11' 11 - 11 1' 2 .1 1- 4 11 1. - 1 .1. ' ' 1 1 U - 171- 11 17, 1. , 1- ' . 1 11 L 1 1- 1 11 111 , 1' A11 1' 13 1 1 1101 , '-'1.1 11, ,,,1 N ' 1 : , ,'l' ' ' 1 ' .10 1 1 7 .. lf! ' .1 'lj 1-' 1' .1 1 1 '- 5 ,I mg. . 'i I 31 '.-Q, 7' G . 1 5' 1, 11 ' J' 1 ' ' Y Q 1 111 1,1 1 '11 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 ' 11 11 W ' Agimd 1 1, . 1 in ' 1 . Uv, 1., 11.1 lfxuf' .1 1 1 1.3 1'111 111 1 -..41 1 15' I - ' V 11 K Q 11.5. F xr. I- ' 3 01:1 V475 ,, 'Vw 1:12. 111, 1.1 1 f1 51: 1 , v , , .1 ,Lx 1 .Hx . .17 ,P QI. sl? 11 11- u 1 1 A 1I .1 1 1 dl 0 1 1 1 52? 31547- 11' if U 1. o ii, 1 X Y 1 1 1 1 1 , -1 P 1 11 ' 'N 1 1 0 1' 1 QX .2 1 1' 'L ..1.' X. li 1:L115.f' X X 1 Kg ,Xb I 1 Y 1 1 1, 4 ' 1 X .X X X 1 .. 1 :jj -uf'-1 .,X ' 1 ' H IXX XXX u-, ' XX '1 X X ' 1 1 XX 'Q 2, XX X XA.-1 1 AX X 1 1 1 1 11 1 '. 'X1:X,. 1 '1 21 X 1X1 1. 1 1 ' ,11 5' 1X . ..1 I,1 1' A 1 ..' 1 ' , D ' 1 1 ' 1 1.,x . If 1 1 '1 1 1. ' ' ' X X .'1 ' W X,X 11 ' ' 1- 111. .1 11 1 1 X ' ' I'.1X XX X X 1 X, XX 1 X.1 X X X X , 1 5,11 .1 X 1 - X1 I-X 1 L, 1 Xl X '- 1 -.,.,1..,, 1 1. 12,11 X . 1 . 1 ' W .1.1':'..,1' , ' ' '1 ti 5. 1 .1 ' X 'L' 1, X 1 11 X. 1-I FT' lf 1 14'1- 1 11 X 1X 1 X' ' 1-1 11 1X 1 - 1 . 'L 111' 11. 11 1 1 14 1' 1. ff f 11 1 1 I 1 A 1 ' 1 . 'M' 1 ' 1 , X J' X1 ' X 1 Q 1 X ' 1 'J 1 X 7 x Y' 11 1x1 ' 1 1 131 .. - X XX X 1 11' .4 1 Y X: 1 XX X 1 X X .1 1. 1X1X ,X 1 ' 11 1+ 1. 41' A J.X.S X .X 1 1 1 1 X X X 1 -15 1 1 1 ' ' 1X '1 N 1 1, .I '- . 1 A ' f ' ' X ' 1 FX - X X 1 ' 1 11 XX , 'I X ' .X4 ,' x 1 X ' X,XX111 ' 1 1 1 ' 3 11 11 g 1 1 - -' 1 1 1 1 1 1, A ' X' , 1 1 f -1 1. 11 1 5 . NLM YIYT M E .., X XX .P ,1 1 -ff . ,. Ng 1 P-' 11 12-rt. 1 1 ,gr V W JJ 11 .1 1, 1 1 .. - X XXX X 1 1 ' 9 R, a. 2 1 X ' 1' 1 B X IE, 2 ' 1 1 , f , 21 X1 X 1 X 1 ' V 5 1 . 1 ' 8 X 5 , 1 J 1 1 x x s . 1 1 X 1 5 fi' 1 41 1 3 1 ,......4, 11X-4 X 1 ..1 X A F :XX H 1 1 I P1 ' 1 1 X 1 ' 4 1 . 1 1 S I P' x 1 1 .X 1 X..-1 y 1 , i'T '-'A+ ' ' , ' f '-U ' IIQQQMM ll ,Q N Ivy fi? X , Q71 V g- P54312
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today!
Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly!
Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.